Blogs
Can conservatives cut a deal with McCain? Sure... but it might hurt a little
Posted 37 weeks 4 days ago byAmidst the hullabaloo surrounding Barack Obama, don't forget John McCain continues to run for president. Or so I've heard. Apparently, he still hasn't sealed the deal with social conservatives. Guess what? He probably never will.
McCain: Too "blue" for the right?
Posted 38 weeks 1 day ago byJohn McCain simply can't win with some conservatives. There is nothing he can do. Brent Bozell, a lion of the right, explains why in today's Washington Post: "This is a movement fed up with betrayals, and they've come one after the other."
CPAC blogging: John Bolton endorses McCain, warns Bush on North Korea
Posted 42 weeks 3 days ago byJohn McCain was famously booed at this convention last year. By my count, McCain has been booed at least four -- maybe five -- times this year. The audience booed him when he spoke yesterday. They boo him whenever a speaker mentions his name.
They booed McCain when former U.N. ambassador, conservative rock-star and future secretary of state John Bolton spoke to the convention this afternoon.
CPAC blogging: Live blogging McCain
Posted 42 weeks 4 days ago byI have great access, but even I couldn't get a seat in the ballroom for John McCain's speech. Instead, I'm set up to watch in the exhibit hall with dozens of other true believers who were shut out of the main event. The line to get in snaked back hundreds of feet through the lower level of the hotel. Everyone here wants to see how McCain will appeal to the crowd here, now that "the conservative's conservative," Mitt Romney, is out of the race.
CPAC blogging: Romney exits
Posted 42 weeks 4 days ago byIt was a terrific speech to go out with. Mitt Romney addressed a packed ballroom at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington D.C., making official the news that had been circulating this morning. He's leaving the race, he says, so that his campaign does not undermine the war effort. Fighting on until the convention, Romney said, would prevent the Republican frontrunner from fighting effectively against Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. Both of those candidates, he said, have announced their desire to retreat and embrace defeat in Iraq. "Sen.
