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John McCain before his acceptance speech.

John McCain before his acceptance speech.

If you were looking for a speech that stands out in your memory years later, such as some given by great orators in our country’s history; George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, FDR, JFK, Reagan or even Barack Obama, you would have been disappointed in Sen. John McCain’s acceptance speech for the nomination of the Republican Party’s presidential candidate.

Everyone knows his delivery leaves a lot to be desired and he is more comfortable talking one on one in town hall-type situations. Last night he addressed America, and had the unenviable chore of speaking the night after the electrifying speech of his running mate.

He threw in a little red meat, but not a lot. He spoke of his personal history and told why his experience as a POW changed him and made him fall in love with his country because he was in another. He said it wasn’t the comforts of home he missed so much as the culture of kindness and stick-to-it-ivness Americans show. (Paraphrasing)

Now that he has explained why that awful time in his life was a milestone for him, it’s time for his surrogates to drop the POW subject and for him to be less specific and answer the questions of how that experience changed his life to make him want to serve the American people the rest of his life.

He talked of our education system, workers who have lost jobs, medical insurance and about the fact he has not always agreed with the Republican party, giving him the nickname of Maverick.

He said the greatest civil rights issue today is education. He told us when a person loses his/her job the government should make sure they are made whole (a union term meaning pay would be the same; my words and not his) until they can get trained and back up in the pay range they were in when they lost their jobs.

He talked about people losing their homes and struggling to pay for gas for their cars and oil for their homes. He is an “all of the above” person when it comes to energy policy. Drill for new oil, use clean coal, natural gas, wind power, nuclear power (more plants), electric cars and any other technology we as Americans can come up with.

In short, he recognized the economy is not as good as it could or should be and shows he has a grasp of the kitchen table issues every American has to deal with daily.

He spoke against the last Republican Congress while adressing a Republican convention. He said the Republicans had lost the House and Senate because they got full of themselves, got corrupt and spent too foolishly. Hard medicine for any person serving during those years, but medicine that has to be taken in order to get better again.

He spoke against earmarks and said if he is elected and a bill with a lot of earmark spending comes to him he will veto the bill and make famous the name(s) of the people inserting the pork. Of course he addressed the national security issues and his beliefs on that topic.

He said he will fight for the Amercian people and not for his party when he disagrees with the party. This struck me as the theme of the night as I listened. I kept thinking “here is a man who says he wants to work across the aisle and with Democrats as well as Independents and Republicans to do what is right for our country. Sen. Obama, on the other hand, delivered a red meat speech and has a record that shows he will not deviate from the party message.”

I also thought of President Bush promising and trying to do the same thing, but he found out the politics in Washington are not like the politics locally, and while someone is smiling at your face he or she is stabbing you in the back and twisting the knife.

Washington politicians don’t want to co-operate; they just want to bloviate and get all the credit for whatever. McCain said they could all take the credit, but urged all Americans to come together for the betterment of our country.

He was not specific in what he has accomplished in a bi-partisan way, but perhaps he thought everyone knew what he had done to earn the nick-name of Maverick.

His closing was very strong and he delivered his lines in spite of the crowd standing and cheering through the last one or two paragraphs. These were the people who had worked in the trenches to make sure he got the nomination and they were not going to be denied their right to gloat last night.

I came away remembering Sen. Obama’s speech a week before and remembering the theme of Sen. McCain’s speech last night thinking that if we elect McCain/Palin we have a chance to put the adults in charge and forget about party politics, or we can elect Obama/Biden and watch at least four more years of political grandstanding and the accomplishment of nothing. No deviation from the party.

I have chosen to stick with the adults even if the head of the ticket is not as dynamic a speaker as his running mate or his opponent. In the end it is actions that count and for those actions we have only to examine the records of the two Presidential candidates first, and then the records of the Vice Presidential candidates. I think McCain/Palin stand head and shoulders above Obama/Biden. Feel free to disagree in the comments section. You can also feel free to agree in the comments section. :)

Following is Sen. McCain’s speech for you to see if you missed it or want to see it again. Our thanks to Hot Air for the video link. I wanted to include the biography of Cindy McCain but so far I have been unable to locate anything but her introductory speech of her husband. You can imagine what she said and you’ll be right.

Written by ~J~

7 Responses to “McCain’s Acceptance Speech”


  1. Sue Says:


    Visit Sue

    Excellent overview of the Senator’s speech ~J~.=d> Not really much I can add.

    Loved the closing..I thought it was by far the meat of the speech in that it not only excited the crowd but showed McCain with a fire we seldom see in his speeches.

    One thing is for certain. This is a man who loves and believes in America and her citizens.

    Now, on to the debates where hopefully details on issues will come to light.


  2. David M Says:


    Visit David M

    It was a very good speech, appropriate for the place and time. An acceptance speech at the convention is not the time to be focused on either details or specifics. This was a speech intended to unify the party and send the delegates home with a sense of purpose. It was a “now-let’s-get-to-work” speech. I actually thought it was superior.


  3. Guss Says:


    Visit Guss

    David and Sue. Did we hear the same speech? Was there another one given that I missed? I as someone that was going to vote for McCain, thought that it was horrible. It will take more than that to bring me back and I’m sure that a lot of people in the middle feel the same. I feel very bad for this man that gave so much to his country but has nothing left to give. It’s time for us old folks to step aside and let a new generation take over. We have had our shot and blew it. This comment may not be sophisticated enough for you to respond and that’s OK.


  4. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    Guss,

    I’m not speaking for anyone but myself, but if you as a father operated a huge business would you step aside and let your untrained 20 year old son or daughter take over the business you built up just because you are getting older? I doubt it.

    Partisanship is what has blown it and not the generation in power now. The people in power have come to love the desires of their parties more than the country they are supposed to serve.

    It’s time now for some wisdom to take place and you don’t get that from someone who is still wet behind the ears.


  5. Guss Says:


    Visit Guss

    If I had ran the business in to bankruptcy, yes I would at least take a chance. Sometimes what we think is wisdom is only stubborness hiding behind a Veil of ignorance. I hope that this is an intelligent response. I wouldn’t want to be called a one liner who is incoherent.


  6. David M Says:


    Visit David M

    Guss-let me clarify. I thought it was an appropriate acceptance speech. Everyone else loved Gov. Palin’s acceptance speech. I hated it. She attacked; attacked; attacked and it was the wrong place. She should have talked about McCain and her successes at that moment. The fact that Obama did the same doesn’t make it a good speech. McCain and Palin were here yesterday. Palin is completely overshadowing McCain. They got off the bus and the crowd was yelling “Sarah; Sarah.” Maybe that’s ok, but that’s what’s happening nationally, too. Then they went to Colorado Springs. That was stupid. The Springs is the most conservative town in Colorado. It’s home to the Air Force Academy. It never votes Democrat. They should have been in Denver, Boulder or Fort Collins. However, Albuquerque was a good choice. Also, Obama is working the Native American vote hard here. That’s 20% of our voters. McCain has automatic respect from the Native American precincts because he’s military. My County has about 18,000 Native American votes. The Obama campaign contacted me last week to ask if my program was allowed to carry literature about the candidates. Yes, we can if the tribes ask. All of my tribes have asked for candidate profiles and platforms. The Obama campaign hand-delivered them to me the next day. The GOP has not responded. That means I’ll have to wait for the League of Women Voters literature, which is excellent, but doesn’t come out until after early voting starts. I hired 14 new employees to work the Native vote last Thursday. Early voting starts October 7th (I think). On Friday, the Obama campaign asked for the names and numbers of all my coordinators, translators and Tribal Governors. This is all public information and they are entitled to it. Obama’s already set up at some of the tribes. McCain has done nothing with the tribes and he served years on the Indian Affairs Committee. We may not have many electoral votes, but we could swing this election. By the way, this is not meant to be argumentative. The Indian vote issue is just facts. My opinion about the speeches deserves no attention. It’s just an opinion. I think Palin turned as many people off as she fired up.


  7. Guss Says:


    Visit Guss

    David, thanks for the clarification. I didn’t read your comment as well as I should and missed the part “appropriate for the place and time” which makes a big difference. All though I saw it differently I should respect the right of others to express their own opinion and not mine.