Originally posted by lord of the mark
I think the degree of movement is exagerrated - McCain, for ex, though he doenst speak in favor of Roe anymore, has been part of the centrist group of Senators on SCOTUS nominations, and thats the practical aspect of the abortion issue right now.
Similarly, despite the assertion that he went hawkish for political reasons, I think hes been fairly consistent on that since before 2000.
The fact is centrist candidates like Clinton, Biden, and McCain (and yup, I know McCain is pretty far right of Clinton and Biden) will always be accused of waffling. Oddly by some of the same people who demand they waffle more (see Clinton and her vote on the war, forex).
I think the degree of movement is exagerrated - McCain, for ex, though he doenst speak in favor of Roe anymore, has been part of the centrist group of Senators on SCOTUS nominations, and thats the practical aspect of the abortion issue right now.
Similarly, despite the assertion that he went hawkish for political reasons, I think hes been fairly consistent on that since before 2000.
The fact is centrist candidates like Clinton, Biden, and McCain (and yup, I know McCain is pretty far right of Clinton and Biden) will always be accused of waffling. Oddly by some of the same people who demand they waffle more (see Clinton and her vote on the war, forex).
As for flip-flopping - agreed. Any centrist (which is what I want) will be branded with that. It's unfortunate that it sticks.
Anyway, my basic point is that you can't always trust what the candidate is saying (that's probably an understatement, dontcha think?). They've got to try to be everything to everybody (post-primary), because the parties are big tents and they've got to manage to get 50% of the vote, or thereabouts (EC and all that). Voting record is better, but has its own pitfalls, particularly if a candidate has a long history.
And, of course, in the end they're all lying bastards anyway.
-Arrian
Comment