McCain To Drop Out Prior To November ?

Filed in National by on June 4, 2008

There is revulsion over McCain on the GOP side.

And anyone who saw McCain’s speech last night must agree with Andrew Sullivan’s assessment:

Put McCain’s speech against Obama’s – and this was a wipe-out. Not a victory. A wipe-out. Rhetorically, they are simply not in the same league. And if the contrast tonight between McCain and Obama holds for the rest of the campaign, McCain is facing a defeat of historic proportions.

McCain was looks and sounds so bad that he may not make it to November. Romney and Huckabee might be thinking that and seemed to have redoubled their efforts to get on the ticket.

About the Author ()

Jason330 is a deep cover double agent working for the GOP. Don't tell anybody.

Comments (5)

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  1. Pandora says:

    Jason, did you read the comments on Right Wing News? Man, they hate McCain. No wonder republicans are so focused on prolonging the Dem split.

    BTW pop over to mydd. The healing has begun.

  2. cassandra_m says:

    David Frum was on NPR not too long ago supposedly to talk about McCain, but ended up talking about Obama and Clinton the entire time. Repubs want Clinton to be propped up as long as possible, and they simply cannot make themselves promote their own candidate.

    Also, let’s not forget that Ron Paul’s supporters are still at repub state conventions taking it to McCain and the establishment types as best as they are able. They’ve recently stirred up the hornets nests at conventions in MO, CO and MN.

  3. Pandora says:

    For a fun Hillary lovefest pop over to DelawarePolitics. Are these guys for real?

  4. cassandra_m says:

    Meh. They do what their handlers want. And their handlers want to talk about Clinton. They think that there is some vast pool of McCainocrats out there. What they won’t remind you of is when McCain dropped out in 2000 (and as the result of very real slime thrown at him by BushCo) is that there were a very gret many of his supporters who refused to vote for Bush because they didn’t trust him, he didn’t have any experience, sound familiar? But at the end they mostly all came home for Bush. Alot happens in a few months. But those Hillary supporters who are at home with their resentments, fears and anxieties are very likely quite at home with repubs.

    And Peggy Agar? She got her interview and an apology. And she doesn’t see what all the fuss is about.

  5. Dana says:

    Oh, good grief! John McCain to drop out? This one was so lame that I had to check the author again; I figured it was another bit of snark from Donviti.