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Romney withdraws, ensuring McCain the Republican presidential
nomination
By Patrick Martin
9 February 2008
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Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney quit the presidential
contest Thursday, essentially assuring that Senator John McCain
of Arizona will be the presidential nominee of the Republican
Party. While former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and Congressman
Ron Paul of Texas remain in the race, neither has any prospect
of winning the nomination.
Romney was trailing badly after the results of the Super Tuesday
primaries and caucuses, and concluded that it would be impossible
to overtake McCain and win a majority of delegates to this summers
Republican National Convention.
He announced his decision to suspend his campaign in a speech
to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington
DC, an annual gathering of the ultra-right and Christian fundamentalist
elements who constitute the most active base of the Republican
Party.
Romney made no mention of the anti-Mormon bigotry which was
a major obstacle to his campaigns winning support from the
Christian right during the early primaries and caucuses. Huckabee
captured the lions share of evangelical voters, splitting
the ultra-right and allowing McCain, who has clashed in the past
with the Christian right, to emerge as the eventual victor.
In his address to CPAC, Romney set a tone of militarism and
fear-mongering that gives a glimpse of the type of campaign McCain
and the Republican Party as a whole will wage in the fall. Romney
lashed out at the two contenders for the Democratic presidential
nomination, Senator Hillary Clinton and Senator Barack Obama,
all but branding them as allies of Islamic terrorism.
He declared that Obama and Clinton have made their intentions
clear regarding Iraq and the war on terror: They would retreat,
declare defeat. And the consequence of that would be devastating.
It would mean attacks on America, launched from safe havens that
would make Afghanistan under the Taliban look like childs
play.
Repeating the phrase that the election was taking place in
time of war, he said that whatever his disagreements with
McCain on other issues, I agree with him on doing whatever
it takes to be successful in Iraq, and finding and executing Osama
bin Laden. And I agree with him on eliminating Al Qaida and terror
worldwide.
If he continued his fight for the nomination until the convention,
Romney said, he would delay the launching of the Republican general
election campaign. Id make it easier for Senator Clinton
or Obama to win. Frankly, in this time of war, I simply cannot
let my campaign be a part of aiding a surrender to terror.
This is language that goes beyond even the hysterical fear-mongering
of the Bush reelection campaign in 2004, and harks back to the
McCarthyite red-baiting of the 1950s.
McCain, who also spoke at the conference, was heavily booed
by the attendees, particularly for his support for the bipartisan
immigration legislation proposed by the Bush administration last
year, which would have permitted many undocumented immigrants
to attain legal status, albeit after paying heavy fines and waiting
as long as 17 years to become US citizens.
The mood of racist bigotry and anti-immigrant frenzy was expressed
by one CPAC attendee, quoted in the Los Angeles Times report
on the conference, who exclaimed, McCain! Hes so awful,
so nasty, so selfish. Its an awful tragedy that he
is to be the Republican nominee. McCain, she continued, would
let Mexicans take over this country.
Romneys speech touched other hot-button issues dear to
the extreme right, suggesting that the Democratic Party would
promote pornography and sexual promiscuity, strangle the US economy
with government regulation and higher taxes, reestablish welfare
programs and promote dependency on government.
But his remarks were dominated by foreboding about the declining
world position of American capitalism. Im convinced
that unless America changes course, Romney said, we
could become the France of the 21st century. Still a great nation,
but not the leader of the world, not the superpower. And to me
thats unthinkable.
He added that given the inevitable military ambitions
of China, we must act to rebuild our military might, raise military
spending to 4 percent of our GDP, purchase the most modern armament...
Senator McCain sounded many of these same themes in his address
to CPAC and in remarks prepared for delivery to a NATO security
conference in Germany which he had planned to attend, then canceled
to continue campaigning in primary and caucus states.
He told the CPAC conference that his prospective Democratic
opponents blamed America for the terrorist attacks of September
11, 2001. Senator Clinton and Senator Obama will concede
to our critics that our own actions to defend against its threats
are responsible for fomenting the terrible evil of radical Islamic
extremism, and their resolve to combat it will be as flawed as
their judgment, he said.
In a speech to a campaign rally in Norfolk, Virginia, he focused
entirely on his prospective Democratic rivals, declaring, They
want to set a date for withdrawal from Iraq that I believe would
have catastrophic consequences. In other speeches, he has
characterized the vague and timid proposals of Obama and Clinton
for partial withdrawal of US forces from Iraq as the announcement
of a surrender date.
The political purpose of such right-wing demagogy is to intimidate
the Democrats and cow them into downplaying as much as possible
any appeal to mass antiwar sentiment, thus repeating the performance
of the Kerry campaign in 2004, under conditions where popular
opposition to the war, now in ending its fifth year, is even more
widespread.
The Democrats fully share the imperialist goals of both McCain
and the Bush administration, but there are differences over what
tactics are to be employed in the pursuit of US domination of
the oil-rich Middle East and Central Asia. Both Obama and Clinton,
to varying degrees, have advocated greater use of diplomacy, economic
pressure, covert action and political propaganda in combination
with military force, even as they defend an indefinite deployment
of tens of thousands of US troops in Iraq.
The Democrats represent, not the mass antiwar sentiment of
millions of working people and youth, but the attitude of a sizeable
section of the ruling elite itself, which has concluded that the
Bush administrations crude and bullying unilateralism has
produced a political, economic and military debacle in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and led to a disastrous decline in US influence around
the world.
McCain has his own tactical differences with the Bush administration,
particularly in relation to its alienation of the European powers,
especially over such issues as the treatment of US prisoners at
Guantánamo Bay. He has criticized the administrations
torture policy, which was defended at the CPAC conference in an
address by Vice President Cheney given only a few hours before
McCain took the rostrum.
The main issue in dispute is not the precise methods to be
used against prisoners, but the Bush administrations ostentatious
disregard for the opinion of its European allies, which McCain
wishes to mobilize behind American imperialism, both in the Middle
East and Central Asia, and against Russia.
In the draft of his speech to the NATO conference, published
in the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, McCain
called for increased use of NATO troops in Afghanistan, where
Taliban and other anti-US insurgents are gaining strength, and
urged countries like Germany to drop restrictions on where and
how their troops can be used in that war zone.
He also called for tougher economic and political sanctions
against Irana country whose bombing he has publicly advocatedconcluding,
A military intervention, always as last means, must remain
as an option on the table: Tehran must understand that it cannot
win a trial of strength with the world.
Perhaps the most provocative portion of his speech was directed
against Moscow. He urged NATO to invite Croatia, Albania and Macedonia
to join, and keep open the door for democracies like the
Ukraine and Georgia. He called for integrating an independent
Kosovo into the European Union and NATOa direct affront
to both Russia and its Serbian client state.
He further called for expelling Russia from the G-8 grouping
of the leading industrialized powers, saying, We should
ensure that the G-8 once again becomes a club of prominent free
market democracies: It should accept India and Brazil, but exclude
Russia.
See Also:
After "Super Tuesday," dead
heat in contest for Democratic presidential nomination
[7 February 2008]
"Super Tuesday" primaries leave
Democratic presidential contest unresolved
[6 February 2008]
On eve of "Super Tuesday" primaries,
Wall Street casts the money ballot
[5 February 2008]
US political establishment lines up behind
Barack Obama
[4 February 2008]
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