Friday, September 26, 2008

McCain Will Debate Obama Tonight

Barack Obama can't be happy about this. No reprieve.

John McCain will participate in tonight's presidential debate.

From Politico:

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) ended three days of suspense on Friday morning and announced that he will leave bailout negotiations in Washington and fly to Oxford, Miss., for tonight's opening presidential debate.

McCain had previously said that he would suspend his campaign—and so would not attend the debate—until an agreement was reached on the administration's $700 billion mortgage proposal.

No such agreement has been reached, but Republicans said the standoff was hurting McCain's campaign and that he would look terrible if he didn't attend the nationally televised, eagerly anticipated debate, while Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) was ready to go on stage.
____________
Here's the text of McCain's announcement that he will go to the debate:
"John McCain’s decision to suspend his campaign was made in the hopes that politics could be set aside to address our economic crisis.

In response, Americans saw a familiar spectacle in Washington. At a moment of crisis that threatened the economic security of American families, Washington played the blame game rather than work together to find a solution that would avert a collapse of financial markets without squandering hundreds of billions of taxpayers’ money to bailout bankers and brokers who bet their fortunes on unsafe lending practices.

Both parties in both houses of Congress and the administration needed to come together to find a solution that would deserve the trust of the American people. And while there were attempts to do that, much of yesterday was spent fighting over who would get the credit for a deal and who would get the blame for failure. There was no deal or offer yesterday that had a majority of support in Congress. There was no deal yesterday that included adequate protections for the taxpayers. It is not enough to cut deals behind closed doors and then try to force it on the rest of Congress — especially when it amounts to thousands of dollars for every American family.

The difference between Barack Obama and John McCain was apparent during the White House meeting yesterday, where Barack Obama’s priority was political posturing in his opening monologue defending the package as it stands. John McCain listened to all sides so he could help focus the debate on finding a bipartisan resolution that is in the interest of taxpayers and homeowners. The Democratic interests stood together in opposition to an agreement that would accommodate additional taxpayer protections.

Senator McCain has spent the morning talking to members of the administration, members of the Senate, and members of the House. He is optimistic that there has been significant progress toward a bipartisan agreement now that there is a framework for all parties to be represented in negotiations, including Representative Blunt as a designated negotiator for House Republicans. The McCain campaign is resuming all activities and the senator will travel to the debate this afternoon. Following the debate, he will return to Washington to ensure that all voices and interests are represented in the final agreement, especially those of taxpayers and homeowners."

I'm glad that the debate will go on as scheduled.

Of course, we all know how it will play out. We know who will be crowned the winner.

Obama's lib media allies are probably readying their scripts in advance:

"Obama was brilliant."

"Obama has an impressive command of foreign policy issues."

"The world wants Obama to win."

"McCain is old."

I'm sure they're drooling already.

Chris Matthews' is getting that thrill up his leg.

Keith Olbermann is foaming at the mouth.

Is there really any point in watching?

15 comments:

Brian said...

two sides to every coin. you kinda sound bitter, and about something that hasn't even happened. there are plenty of outlets that will say mccain shined as well. let's not get too ahead of ourselves.

Anonymous said...

all.

your.

fault.

Anonymous said...

You think Obama is unhappy about this?

Are you retarded? McCain looks like a fool right now as a result of this entire episode.

And the media already have their lines prepared declaring Obama the winner?

Did you not see that McCain's campaign inadvertently released an ad THIS MORNING declaring MCCAIN the DEBATE WINNER?

This blog is written by an unbelievably dishonest and/or ignorant person that is incapable of objectivity.

Anonymous said...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/images/26Sep_Friday_WSJ.JPG

McCain already WON the debate! WOW!

The whole episode left even conservatives admitting that the McCain campaign looked erratic and a bit foolish with no apparent direction or guiding principle.

"It just proves his campaign is governed by tactics and not ideology," said Republican consultant Craig Shirley, who advised McCain earlier in this cycle. "In the end, he blinked and Obama did not. The ’steady hand in a storm’ argument looks now to more favor Obama, not McCain."

and Mike Huckabee says John McCain made a "huge mistake" by even discussing canceling the presidential debate with Sen. Barack Obama. "You can’t just say, ‘World stop for a moment. I’m going to cancel everything,"‘ Huckabee said.

Anonymous said...

Mary stop hittin the crack pipe so hard.

McCain is a flip flopper

Anonymous said...

Sarah Palin has so much policy expierence. "its alaska where do they go, we make sure the eyes are kept on this powerful nation"
ok moron
1. russian is a state not a nation
2. ur an idiot
3. you have no expierence
4. shut up
5. drop out

Mary said...

What ugliness!

Anonymous said...

mary, every post on your blog is full of ugliness and lies.

you are part of the problem.

i'm sorry that you haven't realized this yet.

hopefully someday you will look back on this time in your life and come to terms with what you've done.

Anonymous said...

"The liberal media." When will Sykes, Hannity, New York Post, etc. realize that THEY ARE PART OF THE MEDIA! Conservative members of the media complaining about the media being too liberal kind of cancels itself out.

ariel said...

It's actually Barbara. If you're going to post something, be it positive or negative, spell it right. I'll be watching the debates tonight, too. Enjoy.

Mary said...

What are you talking about, Ariel?

Anonymous said...

Just finished watching the debate. I have never thought this before, but it is now very clear to me that Obama brings us into the future with a bigger mind, more in touch with the world of today. Not the world of yesterday - Kissinger, VietNam. The world has changed by quantam leaps since then and you need a person who is in touch with evolving reality. Obama is today and tomorrow. Sadly, McCain is yesterday. That is huge.

Anonymous said...

Your ship's goin down Mary! All this ugliness you call a blog is doing nothing but rearranging deck chairs. Bon voyage!

Mary said...

While watching the debate, I became convinced that McCain is the right person to be the next president.

I believe with McCain in charge the country would be in good hands.

He has experience and confidence. I find that reassuring.

Anonymous said...

yes because coming off like an angry old man, refusing to look at obama, and constantly interrupting. just because you went to iraq doesn't mean you know the answers.