Horserace
February 5, 2008 12:14 PM

Dole Tells Limbaugh To Give McCain A Chance, Igniting Spat

By
Brian Montopoli
Topics
Republicans
We've been following the split amongst conservatives who support GOP frontrunner John McCain – either wholeheartedly or grudgingly – and those who continue to fight against the prospect of a McCain nomination.

The list of those in the latter camp is not short: It includes Rick Santorum, Robert F. Bennett, Rick Santorum, David Keene, Tom Delay, Rush Limbaugh, Hugh Hewitt, Laura Ingraham, Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity, George Voinovich, Paul Weyrich, and Thad Cochran, who told the Washington Post that "the thought of [McCain] being president sends a cold chill down my spine."

Yesterday, former GOP presidential nominee Bob Dole sent a letter to Limbaugh, one of McCain's harshest critics, asking him to offer his "enthusiastic support" to "[w]hoever wins the Republican nomination."

Dole admitted that he disagrees with McCain's votes against the Bush tax cuts and on campaign finance reform, but writes that he "cannot recall a single instance when he did not support the Party on critical votes."

He cites McCain's pro-life record, calls him a "strong advocate for strict constructionist judges," writes that he supported voluntary school prayer, and notes that McCain backed a balanced budget amendment, opposed pork barrel spending, and defends second amendment rights.

"McCain is a friend and I proudly wore his P.O.W. bracelet bearing his name while he was still a guest at the 'Hanoi Hilton,'" Dole writes. "I believe our major candidates are mainstream conservatives and that our nominee will address our concerns by keeping taxes low, reducing corporate taxes, protecting and assisting the vulnerable, strengthening our traditional values, and above all, keeping America strong militarily, whatever the cost."

Asked about Dole's letter this morning, rival Mitt Romney told Fox News that Dole is "probably the last person I would have wanted to have write a letter for me." That prompted McCain, appearing on MSNBC, to demand that Romney apologize to Dole.

"He's a great American," McCain said. "And for Governor Romney, who has never had any military experience, to disparage the service and courage of an American hero, I think is disgraceful."

Romney, meanwhile, yesterday released a Web ad pushing his theme that McCain is not a conservative. In the spot, "Very Close," an announcer asks, "Is John McCain really the heart and soul of the Republican Party?"

The ad then shows a podium with McCain's picture on it moving closer and closer to a Clinton podium as an announcer says the two agree on "amnesty for illegal immigrants," opposing the Bush tax cuts, a gas tax, and blocking conservative judges.

"Even Bill Clinton says 'she and John McCain are very close," the ad concludes, using audio of comments Clinton made about the two senators' personal relationship, not their positions on the issues. "Don't we need a leader who agrees with us?"

Add a Comment See all 43 Comments
by giantrobot2 February 7, 2008 1:36 AM EST
Mitt Romney should drop out of the race.

He says he knows how to run a business, well if that were true then he should fire himself. Romney has used up more than $70 million in American voter''s donations and has little to show for it. His product is a flop, too expensive and not selling.

On the other hand, Huckabee''s product is very inexpensive and selling just as well or better. Now come on, which product would you buy?

Romney product = $70 dollars for a widget that yields 293 delegates = $0.23 cents per widget
Huckabee product = $2 dollars for a widget that yields 190 delegates = $0.01 cent per widget

Huckabee''s product cost 1 cent per widget compared to Romney''s product at 23 cents per widget which calcuates out to the same performance of the product (division of delegates won so far). Any one in their right mind would buy the widget that costs 1 cent if it performs exactly the same as the widget that costs 23 cents.

The business formula that Romney says he is good at proves that he should drop out of the race. He is wasting tons of money. If he can''t run a campaign finacially sucessfully how in the world will he run a huge American government successfully???

Romney is losing money as fast has Enron did with social security of it''s employee''s.

Huckabee is a true leader, someone who wants to share the power with all Americans, not show his prideful power like Romney does.

Vote for true conservative Mike Huckabee!

Reply to this comment
by marinepatriot February 6, 2008 5:29 AM EST
LIES AND TRICKS FROM ROMNEY AND YET HUCKABEE SWEEPS THE SOUTH!

VIDEO OF FOX NEWS SHOWING ROBO CALLS TRICKING VOTERS INTO THINKING HUCKABEE DROPPED OUT OF THE RACE SO THEY SHOULD SUPPORT MITT INSTEAD. IN MITT''S OWN VOICE! ROMNEY SENT THESE BY THE MILLIONS!

CHECK THE LINK: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk6IJS3QN34

ROMNEY IS EXPECTED TO DROP IN THE POLLS OVER THE NEXT 4 DAYS TO ABOUT 4% OR LESS.

ROMNEY''S TRUTH''S ARE GOING TO BURY HIS CAMPAIGN.
Reply to this comment
by giantrobot2 February 6, 2008 12:06 AM EST
Conservative leaders Dr. James Dobson of Focus on the Family and Tony Perkins of FRC are endorsing Mike Huckabee for President in the huge value voters guide that I received last night from them.

Huckabee scores 100% in the value voter guide they issued while Romney''s liberal views are still showing through on abortion, human cloning, watering down the Federal Marriage act of 1996 and giving the government authorization to take any American''s property if they choose so.

Dr. James Dobson and Tony Perkins and many other huge National Right to Life groups are supporting Mike Huckabee for President.

Don''t let the Republican party fall in the trap of liberals. The Republican platform can not be water down with Romney''s liberal agenda.

If Dr. James Dobson of Focus on the Family and Tony Perkins of FRC are endorsing Mike Huckabee, and with the million member supporters they have through the last 20 years, the conservatives are rallying around Huckabee for true conservative values.
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by TogetherinParis February 5, 2008 11:05 PM EST
Rush, it is not a crime or a sin to be gay, it is a pheromone deficiency. The pheromone is the grease on your father''s face. Wipe it off his face with fresh dry chewing gum, then chew the gum. Homosexuality cured for up to two years. It also works for delinquency and drug addiction (sadly, not alcoholism). The only dangerous side effect of taking adult masculine face grease (collected from skin of the face where a child would kiss his/her daddy) 150 mg p.o. is jealousy. Mild jealousy is always detected in the proband''s main squeeze.

Hillary''s going to win, anyway, so I thought I''d educate some of you.

Yours in service,

Ross Nicholson
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by amishcar February 5, 2008 8:10 PM EST
I''''m a Ron Paul voter. But i love seeing Huckabee beat Romney the Liberal who thinks he can buy the White House like he bought Clear Channel and has Rush the Junkie, Sean Insanity and Lauren well she''''s cool afraid that if they don''''t endorse CONmey they will lose their paychecks. CBS do a story on why MYSPACE aka FOX NEWS is censoring Ron Paul Supporters on Myspace now. I can''''t believe the USA has come to this scary spot in History. Fight the Mega Main Stream Media and take back the USA for the Children''''s Future. God Bless Everyone. Oh and American Conservative Magazine just Endorsed Ron Paul.
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by newsjunky5 February 5, 2008 7:19 PM EST
"It isn''t the country they care about, but the the controversy their negative attitudes generate"

Agreed, and it only takes 51% of the people to be right for a puckered a** contrarian like Rush to be consistently wrong.

There is no reward in the next life for not standing up for what is right in this life.
Reply to this comment
by krisd999-2009 February 5, 2008 7:15 PM EST
"I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism."
-Ronald Reagan

The heart and soul and consience is Ron Paul, but the Republican party by large has been taken over by the big government people. It looks like Obama will be the president regardless if McCain or Romney is the nominee. I don''t see many republicans fired up about them to actually campaign for them like I see for Ron Paul.
Reply to this comment
by newsjunky5 February 5, 2008 7:11 PM EST
"This is great!!! I''''ve waited 8 long years to watch the great serpent that is the GOP devour itself by the tail."

Well said, sm00th0per8r !

Me too, Braise the Lard!
Reply to this comment
by dsought February 5, 2008 7:00 PM EST
The Radio Talk Show media types don''t like McCain because he doesn''t play their game. The Senator is interested in problem solving not playing the "hate your opponent" game. McCain threatens them in the ratings pocket book, which is their bottom line. It is''nt the country they care about, but the the controversy their negative attitudes generate. They''ll trash war heros if it suits their needs.
Reply to this comment
by frananl February 5, 2008 6:56 PM EST
John McCain is a man of integrity and honor, something which is in short supply in Washington! Democrats are tauting change, but I have not heard specifically what and more importantly "HOW" this change will take place. All politicians seem to incorporate "change" into thier platform, yet here we are in 2008 and everything is status quo. If you want change - CHange the politicians in the senate and the house.
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