June 18, 2009 6:26 PM

Analysis: Mac Comes Back

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  This analysis was written by CBSNews.com senior political editor Vaughn Ververs.


John McCain's New Hampshire win, a repeat of his 2000 victory, completes a breathtaking political comeback for the 71 year-old senator. And it adds a small measure of clarity to a Republican race that has been in a state of barely organized chaos for the past year. As the race steams toward the South Carolina primary on Jan. 19, Mitt Romney is on the ropes and John McCain, for the moment, is the front-runner.

Entering the race as the Republican man to beat, McCain's campaign nearly imploded last summer when his top heavy apparatus failed to raise enough money to feed itself.

After a staff shakeup, and sitting Iowa out, the Arizona senator returned to his energetic "straight talk" approach in New Hampshire. That effort paid off tonight and should provide a sizable boost going forward.

Complete New Hampshire returns


Romney's failure to secure a win in either of the first two states despite committing deep resources in both is a crushing blow for a candidate whose strategy was largely based on sweeping out of the early contests. Romney's organization and financial resources will allow him to continue, but he's now on the outside of the track. "I lend credence to the idea that if he loses New Hampshire, it hurts him a lot," Republican strategist Tucker Eskew told CBSNew.com before Tuesday's results were in.

McCain did well among independent voters in New Hampshire, which made up 37 percent of the total GOP vote. McCain carried the most, with 39 percent.

But McCain's fortunes among party regulars may have improved as well. While independents voted heavily for McCain in New Hampshire, exit polls found he held his own among self-described Republicans, nabbing 35 percent of them compared to 33 percent who went for Romney

The GOP race now centers on South Carolina, setting up a face-off between McCain and Iowa victor Mike Huckabee, who finished a distant third in New Hampshire with Romney and Fred Thompson desperate for a breakthrough win.

Michigan holds its primary in one week but its importance in the process is debatable. Romney announced his candidacy there and it's the state his father once served as governor. McCain too has made some efforts in Michigan, where he won in the 2000 primary campaign creating a possible, but less high-profile, repeat of their New Hampshire battle. But Michigan hasn't been the kind of all-out battleground Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina are.

But Republican strategist Greg Mueller says now that he has won New Hampshire, "it will be important for Senator McCain to make a strong appeal to conservative voters in Michigan where he had success in the 2000 campaign in order to keep his train rolling into South Carolina."

Eskew, a former aide to South Carolina Governor Carroll Campbell, says Huckabee long ago began laying the kind of groundwork in the state that he did in Iowa, connecting one-on-one with religious leaders and spending time in the state. A poll taken in December, even before his Iowa caucus win, showed Huckabee led among likely Republican primary voters with 28 percent, followed by Romney at 20 percent. McCain garnered just 11 percent in the polls there. More recent polling in the state indicate an even larger lead.

It is a different part than South Carolina has played in GOP dramas in the past. Since the late 1980s, the state has served as a firewall for embattled front-runners. It has "a history of taking the established front-runner who has been knocked down in the snows of Iowa and New Hampshire and picking them up and brushing them off," he said. This year, "we hope to be a fire-starter for somebody."

Even with a win tonight, McCain faces struggles in the state among rank-and-file party stalwarts. His support for an unpopular immigration reform has hurt him in there and in a bruising 2000 campaign in the state he was branded as being an unreliable Republican, something Eskew argues has lingered in the state and one which is shared by many party activists. "There are some conservatives that will never vote for Senator McCain," says Mueller. "New Hampshire voters showed us tonight that as much as things change they stay the same," he added. "Senator McCain won his second consecutive New Hampshire primary with the help of Independent voters while the race for the GOP nomination remains wide open."

Fred Thompson, whose virtual tie for third in Iowa - a finish not poor enough to end his campaign but not good enough to boost it - left for an 11-day bus tour throughout South Carolina is making his stand in the state after finishing in a near tie with McCain in Iowa and barely registering in New Hampshire. But with few resources and a failure to catch on among voters thus far, a Thompson breakthrough is unlikely.

And then, there's Florida, which votes on January 29th where Rudy Giuliani has made his stand. Not a factor in any of the early states, Giuliani has pinned his hopes on winning Florida and the majority of the big states. Should the field enter Florida without a clear-cut front-runner, it's a strategy which could pay off. "It's a high-stakes gamble but he's still around," said Eskew.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by sdkittel January 9, 2008 5:50 PM EST
The McCain Administration: Gang of 14

It seems that Huckabee, his camp and supporters have a clearer objective of "beating Mitt" than getting their candidate the nom.
Chip Saltsman, a Huck camp spokesman, last night on Fox spent his segment ripping Romney. Another poster above did also.
They know Huck can%u2019t win; this is nothing but a Holy War for Huck supporters who have slowly eroded the GOP Coalition by voting religiously.
And McCain. If you support him you are not a conservative. He%u2019s an honorable man, a great man, but he voted against Bush%u2019s cuts, is pro-amnesty and constantly sides w/ liberals.
Romney discussed ISSUES in his "attack" ads. McCain & Huck very immaturely insulted him (and the dignity of the race for the presidency) during both the NH and Fox Forum debates.
All the contention from these 2 camps is strongly indicative of the Romney threat.
Romney is the best for the economy, and that is the single-most important issue facing us in thia selection process. We cannot win the war on terror without a strong and vibrant economy. Romney is a business turn-round master...he can and will do the same for the US economy when elected.
Conservatives need to ask themselves: does "straight-talk" from McCain outweigh the very principles this entire party is for? Are you a Republican or an independent?
LOOK AT THESE:

http://myclob.pbwiki.com/Why+I vetoed contraception bill

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-
G9hydflwEQ
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 January 9, 2008 3:18 PM EST
McWar is the BIGGEST war pig!!!! He even stated he dosen''''t care if we are in Iraq for 100 years. Do you
really want this nutjob running our country?????

Posted by tylenol6 at 11:51 PM : Jan 08, 2008


If anyone forgets his war stance they are crazy, He said, the surge is working, I beg to differ mr mc cain and you better quit talking like Bush, the people in your own state want you out. The Surge was to help the Iraq government make policy have you seen any gains in this area? How many bodies and sheiks have been killed just this month Iraqi soldiers killing Americans Man you will never get it. They say you are a straight shooter well How about those streets that were so safe in IrAq where you had a company of military out of sight protecting you. You lied just like Bush, you are a war monger and America has had enough, and folks, do not forget immigration,he would let every illegal stay to get lower wages in this country and the poor Americans would just get poorer.We better send him to the cleaners he is too dirty
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 January 9, 2008 3:08 PM EST
I hoping for a Clinton-Edwards ticket. And Mac can retire now. A 100 year war would seem like nothing to a 1000 year old man like him.

Posted by Glidescube at 12:34 AM : Jan 09, 2008
+ repo

Edwards he is just waiting around for any type cabinet or a vice president job . After what he tried to do to Clinton in Iowa and N.H. he will not be asked by Clinton to do anything. If Clinton goes the whole way she will ask Obama to be her running mate and maybe vice versa
Reply to this comment
by starleo146 January 9, 2008 3:03 PM EST
Does anyone really want this geezer plus running the country ? I wouldnt want him serving my McD''''s meal this afternoon.

Posted by tejasdemo at 11:50 AM : Jan 09, 2008

Not me, he is arrogant, know it all, Bush clone, and I hope this is Custers last stand, the big bully, can you see him making speeches, he could hardly read the one he had last night, BORING acceptance speech I have ever heard, and every time his supporters applauded he looked very upset that he might lose his place.What is wrong with this country that they would consider to vote for a renegade senator who is a cloned ,bully bush.
Reply to this comment
by tejasdemo January 9, 2008 2:50 PM EST
Does anyone really want this geezer plus running the country ? I wouldnt want him serving my McD''s meal this afternoon.
Reply to this comment
by tyahlstrom January 9, 2008 4:04 AM EST
Governor Romney is the real winner so far. He placed a close second place in Iowa, overwhelmingly won Wyoming (which has more votes than New Hampshire, 14-12), and had a close second in New Hampshire.

Even though they won the first couple of races, Senator McCain and Governor Huckabee still aren%u2019t serious contenders for the white house, and they wouldn%u2019t stand a chance against the Democrats. The race is going to come down to Romney and Giuliani nationally. And considering how well Romney has done thus far, and that both Michigan (his home state) and Nevada (high percentage of Mormons) are coming up, I think he stands a pretty good chance in this election.

In fact, I would say his losses in 2 of the first 3 states is an advantage for him. If he would have swept the first three he would have been a huge target. Now he has the underdog advantage, and from these past few elections we know how much Americans enjoy voting for underdogs.
Reply to this comment
by glidescube January 9, 2008 3:34 AM EST
I hoping for a Clinton-Edwards ticket. And Mac can retire now. A 100 year war would seem like nothing to a 1000 year old man like him.
Reply to this comment
by tylenol6 January 9, 2008 2:51 AM EST
McWar is the BIGGEST war pig!!!! He even stated he dosen''t care if we are in Iraq for 100 years. Do you
really want this nutjob running our country?????
Reply to this comment
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