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First Read is an analysis of the day's political news, from the NBC News political unit. First Read is updated throughout the day, so check back often.

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Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



McCain: Hope and resolve

Posted: Thursday, October 09, 2008 9:07 AM by Carrie Dann

The Washington Post’s Balz writes that McCain’s candidacy right now is a little like the declining stock market. “Lack of confidence breeds retreat. He needs an injection of fresh political confidence.” Yet Balz continues that Team McCain has been in this position before. But inside the McCain campaign there is resolve, which comes from the candidate himself. Whatever difficult days lie ahead, they believe they have seen worse. McCain put it best in his closing statement Tuesday: "I know what it's like in dark times. I know what it's like to have to fight to keep one's hope going through difficult times. I know what it's like to rely on others for support and courage and love in tough times. I know what it's like to have your comrades reach out to you and your neighbors and your fellow citizens and pick you up and put you back in the fight."

“The homeowner assistance plan that Senator John McCain announced without detail in the presidential debate Tuesday night,” the New York Times writes “would allow millions of financially stretched Americans to refinance their mortgages with government help, but it would leave taxpayers to cover the losses, rather than the financial institutions that hold the original mortgages. Mr. McCain said in the debate that the program would be expensive, and on Wednesday his chief economic adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, acknowledged that the liability would be borne directly by taxpayers.”

Politico says McCain “made an overnight change in the homeowner bailout he proposed at Tuesday’s presidential debate, making it more generous to financial institutions and more costly for taxpayers. McCain's staff says it was always meant that way.”

A Washington Post editorial also points out that the proposal “would benefit borrowers and lenders who made bad decisions and, at least as Mr. Holtz-Eakin described it, it lacks a clear mechanism for reassembling and extricating whole mortgages from the welter of securities "tranches" into which Wall Street slices and dices them.”

George Will writes the pre-McCain obit. "When cranky, as he frequently was, Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver would shout at an umpire, 'Are you going to get any better or is this it?' With, mercifully, only one debate to go, that is the question about John McCain's campaign." Pivoting off McCain's bailout proposal, Will adds, "Still it may be politically prudent for McCain to throw caution, and billions, to the wind. Obama is competitive in so many states that President Bush carried in 2004 (including Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Colorado and New Mexico), it isn't eccentric to think he could win at least 350 of the 538 electoral votes."

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It's not a question of whether or not McCain's plans are capable.  Time and time again, Americans will ignore the heeded warnings that have always been there and opt for the cheapest remedy to the most expensive problems.
This is a time when the true core values of every individual need to be affirmed on a daily, or even hourly, basis.  We are presented with a challenge here; to prove that Americans aren't too weak and selfish to see this crisis through; the challenge of realizing that we can't act like everything's fine and the government is going to handle it.  We must rise to the occasion, every one of us, and say that America is worth spending a little bit of money on to save us in the long run.

We have to understand that the first finger we point must be at ourselves.  My own shaky confidence comes not from what the candidates at the debate had to say, but rather, the front-page respectability of articles that show how to save money or cut expenses by doing the blatantly obvious.  I think it's a bit condescending to say "don't buy a latte", but then, maybe it's exactly what people need to hear.  Perhaps the people out there buying lattes are the ones condescending themselves.
Look, I'm not saying that we should blame ourselves for a bad economy, just that we should see where we stand in it.  We cannot continue to extract the teeth from our gift horses and thinking we don't deserve to get kicked in the head.
I don't like having my parade rained on either, but when it is rained on, I will admit that I am wet, and I will reach for my own towel- not theirs.  IF YOU WANT TO GET OUT OF A HOLE, YOU MUST FIRST STOP DIGGING...
Americans deserve your Intestinal Fortitude now to Combat this Unknown QUANTITY, oboma.   He must show Investigators where His DONATIONS  have come from and What plans he has for the Radical Blacks in our great Nation.   Jesse and Al are No NO's.  Give oboma and his supporters, HELL.
IF WE WANT OUR COUNTRY BACK THERE IS ONLY
BARACK AND JOE, THE ONLY WAY FOR AMERICA TO GO!!!!!
Great, I decided not to take the leap on a "risky" mortgage because I was responsible but now I the middle class taxpayer have to bear the burden for irresponsible decisions while the CEOs take a vacation at the spa....Thanks McCain for thinking of me
It really all comes down to money, doesn't it? How much money you spend on getting the word out. How much money the government is throwing at the economy only to see it continue to slide.

John McCain was my candidate of choice in 2000. He was, at the very least, who should have been V.P. to be there to embrace and include the Democrats in implementing administration policy.

I am beginning to feel as though I will be wasting my vote on the McCain/Palin ticket even though I whole-heartedly support them and believe that they are the ones who will bring the REAL change we need to D.C.

I am, however, greatly disappointed that John McCain's message has been largely missed as a result of his decision to take federal campaign funds. In retrospect he should have opted out when Obama broke his promise about taking federal campaign funds and opted out. I firmly believe we would be looking at a completely different situation in these last 4 weeks leading up to the election than we are now even in the face of the economic melt-down.

What a shame it is that the country seems to be turning it's collective back on a man who truly deserves the Presidency. John McCain has devoted his entire adult life to serving his country. The second highest ultimate service to country is to serve as it's leader. John McCain is a man who is trustable and who puts country above himself.

Unfortunately for him, this is his last opportunity for the Presidency. Assuming that a one-term Presidency for Obama is quite likely it would still be too late for McCain to run at age 76-77 in four years.

Personally, I am scared snotless about the prospects of an Obama Presidency. I've watched the debates, the interviews, the speeches all along. He's a great "face" but when confronted with real questions he has artfully dodged them with the skill of the character of the Texas Governor in the musical "Best Little Whorehouse in Texas!"

I am resigned to facing the higher taxes that are inevitable in an Obama administration and that we will quite likely lose our home and everything my family has worked for as a result in the next four years. I don't trust "pretty boys" and, being from the midwest, I especially don't trust Illinois Democrats! FAR too long a track history there that OUGHT to be scaring the pants off EVERYONE...

Having watched an airing of "Man of the Year" (Robin Williams) I am convinced that we desperately need the kind of straight talk that his character presented in that movie. I see elements of this in McCain. I haven't seen it in Obama at all.

When I first heard him speak in 2004 I wondered if he was a Democrat that I could vote for. Since then I have been consistently disappointed in Obama.

McCain's got the track record that we call all see and judge. Obama has virtually no record we can use to judge his positions or potential decisions upon.

We are witnessing the election of a virtual unknown to the highest office in the land and it is almost reminiscent of the rise to power of a certain German boy who also had the gift of gab and the life history of being disadvantaged. Hasn't ANYONE else seen this disturbing parallel?

It is NOT my intent to portray Obama as another Hitler here. Simply to draw a comparison of the circumstances in which Hitler came to power in Germany which ARE disturbingly similar to what is taking place now in America.

Obama isn't Hitler or the Anti-Christ by any stretch of the imagination (at least I sure HOPE not!) but there is no way that this country's precariously perched economy stand today can survive the kinds of tax increases (even if they are targeting those with incomes >$250K!) that an Obama administration and a Democrat-run Congress will thrust upon us within the first year of the next presidential term.

Wake up, America! It's time to put duty, honor, service, and dedication to country rather than self FIRST!!! We desperately need the kind of leadership that leads by example: the kind that places God first, the other guy second, and "me" last.

Unfortunately, we're all scared these days and the voting public usually will follow the new voice for the sake of perceived change. That means that I'm probably going to go to sleep on November 5th having heard the scary words "President-Elect Barack Obama."

And I thought the Clintons scared me!!!
HOPE AND RESOLVE!
There is not hope with McCain.  It will be 4 more years of the same thing if McCain is elected. The only solution is real change.  With McCain there will be and all democrat congress and senate and nothing can be accomplished.  With Obama true change will happened


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