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J.C. WATTS: McCain vs. Obama: Inspiration vs. conviction

It is looking more and more like the upstart senator from Illinois, Barack Obama, will be the Democratic nominee for president. If that's the case, and Sen. John McCain gets the GOP nod, which is beyond forgone, the race of 2008 will be one of inspiration versus conviction.

How so? Gather around and let me fill you in.


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  • Sen. Obama has turned the political world on its collective head. He has defied the Clinton machine, as he has been better organized, has raised more money, has drawn bigger and more enthusiastic crowds, and is by far the most inspirational candidate. No contest.

    Despite the fact that some think he is rallying crowds and new voters with platitudes and fluff, you have to admit this guy has a special sauce for which no one else -- Republican or Democrat -- has the recipe. He really does have the persona of a candidate who is very special.

    In fact, when the primary season ends, he may have a tailwind behind him that Republicans won't be able to cut through.

    Obama's opponents say he's offering no specifics. Not true.

    He's offering health care for everyone who has none. As a result, the cost of health care for the rest of us will increase dramatically over the next two to four years. Offering no proposals to trim spending and cut out waste in the federal government, he will have no choice but to increase taxes on not just the rich, but on working class men and women as well.

    I chuckle when I hear the talking heads say they can't believe he is creating such a following. It shouldn't be surprising.

    Harken back nine months and look at all the polling data, and you'll see that no Democrat was drawing more than 30 percent of the vote, including Sen. Clinton. Hillary is, of course, married to the guy who at the time was the most popular Democrat in the world.

    With the Clinton machine and the Democratic establishment firmly ensconced behind Hillary, the conventional wisdom coronated her early on. In one of my television appearances, my Democratic counterpart said Sen. Clinton would do extremely well with the black vote. I disputed that and said, "Mark my words: Obama will win 70 percent of the black vote."

    Well, I was wrong. He has carried 80 to 85 percent of the black vote. Never underestimate inspiration.

    People of all colors want to be inspired, and Sen. Obama is indeed inspiring, regardless of what one may think of his policies.

    John McCain, on the other hand, is part of the World War II generation, and he inspires by conviction.

    To paraphrase the old Nike slogan, he Just Did It.

    In spite of what one may think of his policies, I don't think anyone can accuse Sen. McCain of putting his finger in the air to check which way the political winds are blowing. No one can accuse him of looking at polls and saying, "This is an 80 percent issue; this is where I need to be." That's just not his style.

    Sen. McCain is a former prisoner of war whose captors offered to release him early. He declined the offer because of his convictions to be treated no differently than other POWs.

    Sen. McCain is reminded of his experience every time he puts his coat on. You see, he has limited mobility in his arms because of injuries sustained during his detention in that POW camp.

    Because of his convictions to protect and defend, he Just Does It.

    He got battered politically when 75 percent of the nation was calling for no more troops in Iraq. Because of his convictions, he said sending more troops was the right move and he was convinced that it would get us on the right track in Iraq.

    He held his ground. He was proved right.

    Some of the things I saw Sen. McCain do when I served with him in Congress were profiles in conviction. I disagreed with him on some, but I always respected his character and his conviction.

    I have great respect for Sen. Obama and what he has accomplished to this point. All the gatekeepers in the Status Quo Caucus were skeptical, but his poise and inspiration have won over the people who count the most -- the Democratic voters.

    I also have great respect for Sen. McCain. To the gatekeepers on the Republican side, I say, "Grow up." He won fair and square and stuck with his convictions, and won over the people who really count -- Republican voters.

    These two men will make for an historic election contest. Inspiration vs. Conviction. This will definitely be a contest for the ages.

    J.C. Watts (JCWatts01@jcwatts.com) is chairman of J.C. Watts Companies, a business consulting group. He is former chairman of the Republican Conference of the U.S. House, where he served as an Oklahoma representative from 1995 to 2002. He writes twice monthly for the Review-Journal.

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    Report abuse

    Lisa Ramos-Carey wrote on October 20, 2008 01:36 PM: Read your article on inspiration vs. conviction, thought it was very interesting......I was interested in knowing what your thoughts were now about the campaign and the two nominees? Do you still feel the same way or has your point of view changed in any way?


    Report abuse

    Allan Honeyman wrote on September 13, 2008 10:20 AM: McCain received no injuries in prison. He sustained all his injuries in the faulty bailout from his plane over VietNam. His captors knew almost immediately that he was the son of the admiral in charge of the theater and treated him with kid gloves, including treatment denied to other American POW's.

    By the way, his jailers nickname for him was "songbird".

    Also, that jet was the last of five jets destroyed with him as pilot.

    I heard the Top Gun school was instituted because of the relatively poor performance of American pilots compared with the Korean War.

    Is it possible that John McCain was one of those poor pilots?


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    Gina wrote on July 18, 2008 10:54 AM: Obama is not only a Socialist, who wants Americans to hand over their hard earned cash, in a grandiose scheme to redistribute America's wealth ... he spent 20 years listening to the anti-American, racist sermons of black liberation pastor Jeremiah Wright, which were based upon Marxist ideology ... along with his wife and two children ... and they still attend the same church, listening to the same anti-American trash!


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    Jon Stoege wrote on July 16, 2008 04:20 PM: I thought J C Watts was a conservative at heart, but I see now, especially considering the fact he is a former pastor, that abortion-even partial birth abortion-means nothing to him as an issue since he is so enamored with voting for someone of his own race rather than for a conservative of whatever race. Lost a lot of respect for him.


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    Perry Davis wrote on June 28, 2008 11:46 AM: I agree with the others that would like to see you as VP with McCain. We would have inspiration and conviction. You are inspiring as Obama. Plus you have conviction. Say yes.


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    Anita wrote on June 19, 2008 10:03 AM: I highly respect your opinion. I do wish you would be McCain's VP. I have heard you speak and you speak with conviction. Our country desperately needs people like you in our government.


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    candace ruggleby wrote on May 22, 2008 05:20 PM: You'd make an excellent VP to McCain. Have you thought of it? Has he approached you?


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    lena Gipson wrote on March 04, 2008 01:27 PM: I have kept up with your political record and believe we need J.C. Watts as the Republican Vice Presidential nominee. Also why has it not been pointed out that Obama did not vote about the Iraq wwar since he was not in the senate at the time, nor did he have the information about it that the Senate was privileged to know? Also with no caps on spending when would taxing of the "working" men and women ever have a limit? I will rather have a president with conviction and the courage to protect the American people, nothing else will matter if our nation ceases to exist. Let's call Obama's policies what they are-socialist. Look at history and see where his words come from, what leaders of other nations he is quoting. Do we really want an America that is run by the federal government? ni na dn wh ay >


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    mg wrote on February 28, 2008 09:35 AM: Yes, JC, inspiration versus conviction is the postive way to look at it. I'd look at it like this:

    flim-flam versus medeocrity.

    Obama is smooth, but his substance is run of the mill leftism. Nothing new. McCain has beliefs, but no conservative philosphy to build them. He is a middle of the roader.

    This will be an election of historic proportion. The first black president against Gerald Ford's ghost.

    Both options are poor. the country will be worse for either candidate. I appreciate you putting a good face on it, but let's face it, do we really have much to work with here?

    JC, you'd bring both conviction and inspiration. Why not JC in 08?


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    GEORGE wrote on February 25, 2008 03:37 AM: 80 to 85 percent of blacks vote for Obama because he is black. Isn't that racism?


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