PHOENIX. — Republican John McCain lost
Tuesday’s presidential election because he could not overcome
a hostile economic environment, distance himself from an
unpopular president or convince voters he could lead them out
of the crisis.
As the blame game, analysts also said
McCain’s choice of inexperienced Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as
his vice presidential running mate raised doubts about his
judgment. It ultimately may have alienated more voters than it
attracted.
McCain’s attempts to portray Barack Obama
as a tax-raising socialist with friends who were terrorists
drove away moderate voters, who handed the Democrat a decisive
victory on Tuesday.
An extremely unpopular Republican president
coupled with a sputtering economy made for a tough political
climate for McCain. Even if he had run a perfect campaign, it
may not have been enough this year.
After eight years of Republican White House
rule, the party had turned off racial minorities, young voters
and more educated voters. The final blow was the large-scale
defection of working class whites devastated by the economic
crisis.
But the Arizona senator’s response fell
flat. He did not distance himself early or forcefully enough
from President George W. Bush, party strategists said, and his
lack of a coherent economic message loomed large as the issue
trumped the Iraq war in voters’ minds.
In a gracious concession speech late on
Tuesday, the former Vietnam prisoner of war reflected on his
campaign and took responsibility for its failures.
"I don’t know what more we could have done
to try to win this election," he told supporters at a somber
post-election rally in Arizona. "We fought as hard as we
could. And though we fell short, the failure is mine, not
yours."
Republican strategist John Feehery said
McCain’s association with Bush was a key stumbling block that
could have been addressed more decisively.
"He did not break from Bush early on and he
should have," Feehery said. "He hired a lot of Bush advisers
and they were just as loyal to Bush as they were to McCain."
McCain add a line to his campaign speech in
mid-October saying "I’m not George Bush" but it was too late.
The financial crisis that erupted in
September was a turning point, reversing McCain’s temporary
lead in the polls. He never recovered.
"The economic meltdown restructured the
entire race and made it difficult for McCain to compete for
those undecided independent voters," said Republican
strategist Scott Reed.
McCain’s decision to suspend his campaign
and return to Washington to broker a Wall Street bailout deal
turned out to be a "strategic and tactical mistake," he said.
McCain asked for the first presidential
debate to be postponed, but Obama calmly responded that the
candidates could focus on more than one thing at a time —
forcing McCain to climb down. When the debate took place,
Obama won.
McCain wounded himself with other economic
gaffes. He said the fundamentals of the U.S. economy were
strong and then tried to paint the mistake as a defense of the
American worker.
He championed himself as someone who
largely opposed regulation in the financial industry but
reversed course when banks started failing and the Wall Street
crisis spread.
The financial crisis also put McCain’s
"maverick" image into a harsher light. Voters viewed Obama’s
response to the crisis as cool and McCain’s as unsteady.
Aides said the economic and political conditions in the
country severely hampered their candidate’s electoral chances.
– Reuters