What’s A Conservative To Do?

Protein Wisdom’s resident red-blooded Red Stater takes stock after South Carolina:

What to do? Well, my first thought is to buy some remote land in Idaho and try to hole up for the next decade or so, learning to sustain myself with nothing but a Bowie knife and some animal pelts. And maybe Dish Network and a HD DVR receiver.

But why bother?

Why indeed. Yeah, they really do hate McCain that much.

The Parties Stagger On

Ivotedstephenmortongetty

I’m really chuffed about McCain. But his squeaker in South Carolina makes it both more likely that he will be the nominee and less likely that he will unite the GOP enthusiastically behind him. He may have to put Huckabee on the ticket at this rate, which will make him uncomfortable and the economic right apoplectic. A very narrow and divisive McCain victory wouldn’t be as bad for the GOP as a narrow and divisive Romney victory, but it’s not great news either.

Similarly, the longer the Democratic race goes on, the likelier it appears that Clinton could well win the nomination in a way almost designed to maximally divide and demoralize her own party – and raise her own national negatives to stratospheric levels. It would mean a Clinton candidacy in the fall that had actively alienated independents and repelled Republicans, while undermining a key source of Democratic support – African-Americans.

If both parties commit slow suicide, does either win in the end?

(Photo: Stephen Morton/Getty.)

The Base Deals With McCain

They’re not happy, if Levin is any indicator:

The problem for McCain is his record (which some of his supporters want us to downplay, or to limit to certain issues most important to them, or claim what matters is that he can beat the Democrat, or whatever). That’s not going to work right now. Even if this website were to close down tonight and never reappear, McCain’s positions on some major issues simply won’t go down with a lot of conservatives.

 

After Nevada

Crowley:

I see a disaster averted for Hillary–but with Obama alive and well. In the unlikely event of a Hillary victory in South Carolina, Obama could face a crisis of his own. More likely, we are headed to February 5 and quite possibly beyond in what looks like a long war of attrition.

I’m not sure what to make of Nevada as such. It was another close race, with delegates closely divvied up. Clinton won in a campaign run by the son of Nevada’s Senator and Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid. Big whup. But it’s a win nonetheless, and momentum matters, and Obama failed to bring enough new voters to the polls to overcome Clinton’s base support. I don’t think it means that much unless it’s a sign that Latino voters won’t back a black candidate. If that’s true, several states that Obama might have won will go to Clinton. Meanwhile, we have a red-faced former president to look forward to:

Mark on your calendar Jan. 25 for an outburst by Bill Clinton somewhere in South Carolina. He has launched a tirade the day before each of his wife’s victories in Nevada and New Hampshire, claiming the process was unfairly stacked against her. If this keeps up, he’s going to require a stretcher by the last primary in Oregon come May.

McCain Squeaks Through

33 – 30 as of this hour … and Fred prepares to quit? Ambers gives seven reasons for a McCain revival, including exquisite timing:

(6) Romney’s decision to pull out at the last minute…Giuliani’s decision to pull out earlier…

This makes it close to impossible for Rudy to pull this one out. Ron Paul beat him again! But Huckabee’s strong showing means he’s not out of it yet. If Fred leaves, Huckabee could even gain some Southern steam. It’s a Huckabee-McCain-Romney race now.