Fred Thompson Goes After John McCain

January 15th, 2008 By: Michael van der Galien | Tags:

Via Hot Air comes the following video (below the fold): Senator Fred Thompson has, according to his supporters finally, gone after Senator for Arizona John McCain. As AP points out, “[i]t would have been more effective if he’d gone after him individually instead of lumping him in with Huck but the race being what it is in South Carolina, he doesn’t have much choice. Any attack on one benefits the other so he’s forced to attack both.”

Thompson: “When you look at the approach of Governor Huckabee and Senator McCain, they clear are moving away from what I consider to be the sound constitutional traditional principles that the Reagan coalition was founded upon.”

When asked whether he’s doing the job for John McCain by going after Huckabee, Thompson pointed out that he mentioned McCain as well and that he considers this mantra to be one of Huckabee’s talking points. “I had several policy differences that I had with him when we were standing there, man to man, face to face, he didn’t answer any of them. Now three days later he comes back with accusations like this or that, it’s all about process and doing someone else’s work. The notion that I’ve been doing what I’ve been doing for the last several months day and night, to be some kind of a stalking horse for someone else, is beyond ludicrous,” he said.

Watch it:

YouTube Preview Image

And that’s not the only situation in which he went after McCain either. In an interview with Glenn Beck he criticized his former colleague in the Senate for voting against the Bush tax cuts and for his stance on immigration.

There are some real policy differences between McCain, Huckabee and Thompson and the latter is right to point those differences out. There are choices beyond the moderate Republican McCain and the Christian Conservative Huckabee. Thompson is one of them, Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney are the two others.

That’s one of Fred’s major strengths: policies.

And it seems that his new approach is working: he’s surging in South Carolina and especially nation-wide. Yes, he’s still 10% or more behind McCain in SC, but considering where he had to come from it shouldn’t be impossible for him to make up the difference with McCain in at least that state, especially not if Mitt Romney wins today in Michigan.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • SphereIt
  • NewsVine
  • TailRank
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  1. Winghunter
    January 16th, 2008 at 00:47
    Reply | Quote | #1

    The Huckster has a republican view on one issue, this hardly makes him a conservative by any stretch of the imagination;

    Candidate Research - Know Who You’re Voting For ( The Easy Way )http://sayanythingblog.com/readers/entry/candidate_research_know_who_youre_voting_for/

  2. Larry
    January 16th, 2008 at 03:39
    Reply | Quote | #2

    Did Thompson and McCain have a lovers spat or was this for show?

  3. levotb
    January 16th, 2008 at 03:52
    Reply | Quote | #3

    Thompson will drop out shortly and endorse not his friend McCain but the eventual President, Romney.

  4. Don Jones
    January 16th, 2008 at 08:30
    Reply | Quote | #4

    Fred always has been the best candidate. Now that the economy has started to tank Fred would do well to take on the gas tank. The cost of fuel is the cancer that is eating the economy. There is plenty of oil for us if we can prove to the green people we can have oil and green fields. Also we need to build nuclear plants again.

  5. Steve
    January 16th, 2008 at 12:17
    Reply | Quote | #5

    If the Republicans really wanted to defeat Clinton or Obama, they would vote for McCain. Other GOP candidates will lose the general election by large margins.

PoliGazette Comments Policy

PoliGazette encourages comments from all viewpoints, especially those that disagree. Comments submitted must, however, adhere to the following standards. Comments that violate these standards may be edited or deleted without notice at the sole discretion of the editors. Commenters who repeatedly or egregiously violate these standards or who attempt to argue publicly with editors regarding the comments policy may be banned from commenting further.

(1) Comments should address the substantive content of the post. Comments that repeatedly or blatantly misrepresent the content of the post or of others' comments are not welcome. Comments that respond to something other than which the contributor or commenter may have said are irrelevant and should not be posted.

(2) Comments should avoid vulgarity as well as racial, ethnic, religious, or sexual bigotry.

(3) Comments should not personally attack the character, personal integrity, or professional reputation of any PoliGazette contributor or of other commenters.

(4) Comments should reflect the contributions of the commenters themselves and should not include extensive cut-and-paste reproductions of others' words except insofar as necessary to supplement the commenter's own arguments. Link spam, trackback spam, and propaganda spam will be instantly deleted.

(5) Public figures are considered open to all substantive criticism of their policies and statements. Comments that present objectively false factual information about public figures (i.e. "Obama is a Muslim") or that attack public figures by attacking their families are not welcome. Comments that merely repeat slogans for or against a candidate without engaging in substantive comment are not welcome.

Questions or challenges to these policies or their application should be directed to the editors by email only.


Warning: is_writable() [function.is-writable]: open_basedir restriction in effect. File(error_log) is not within the allowed path(s): (/home/p6525pol:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php:/tmp) in /home/p6525pol/public_html/wp-includes/wp-db.php on line 500