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Home Front: Politix
The Corner: Webb's Rally (lol)
2006-11-11
Good stuff, from a reader:

They had to run that clip because the much of the rest of his speech was an absolute riot.

He started off by mentioning that "tomorrow is an extremely important day for America," and the crowd went wild, thinking he was talking about taking power. But of course, he launched into his praise of the Marine Corps, and the crowd cheered a little less loudly. Then he thanked all the brave veterans and brave men still fighting, and the crowd cheered a little less loudly again.

Then he mentioned that he received a call from Sen. Allen, and the crowd went nuts again. Then he mentioned how pleasant and dignified Allen was, and the crowd grew quiet. Then he said he was having lunch next week with Allen — and the crowd was dead silent. Finally he told the audience that they should all thank Sen./Gov. Allen for his many years of dedicated service to the people of Virginia — and you could almost hear the people gathered looking at each other asking, "What the $#@! did we just do?"

It was priceless.

Heh.
Posted by:.com

#5  I hope that he is able to become a little more political saavy. Not a bad man.
Posted by: closedanger@hotmail.com   2006-11-11 14:43  

#4  That's the hope. We'll see ....

And I say that as a 30 yr Dem from a blue collar / military family.
Posted by: lotp   2006-11-11 08:41  

#3  Webb is Pat Buchanan, or, rather, what Pat Buchanan would be if Pat Buchanan had a touch of class* and a successful writing career. Hell make common cause with the likes of Sherrod Brown** on economic issues, but he'll definitely have trouble getting along with the "celebrate diversity" and "our troops are war criminals" bunch, and I wouldn't be totally surprised if he ends up hawkish on the WoT and a sort of de facto ally of the President, at odds with his own caucus.

*-Thanking Sen. Allen for his service and treating him nicely on the way out is the classy thing to do. (If it's insincere--and I don't knos that it is, mind you--well, remember that hypocrisy is the homage that vice pays to virtue.)

**-Standard-issue Mk. 1 Mod. 0 Northeast Ohio union-backed populist ward heeler. I grew up among these sorts of people in Youngstown. I left town as soon as I could.
Posted by: Mike   2006-11-11 08:30  

#2  "Doesn't play well with others" was the verdict back under Reagan. No surprise here, other than to the Dems who know so little about the military that they think finding a veteran who criticizes Bush means they've found a soulmate.

Webb is Not Ready for Primetime in political situations, whether in the Pentagon or in Congress. He sees himself as representing the lower middle class white, Scots-Irish southerners and so he'll be happy to vote for higher minimum wage and protectionist trade policies. But he will be a loose cannon who cannot be depended upon by EITHER side of the aisle, if his stint under Reagan is any indication.
Posted by: lotp   2006-11-11 04:09  

#1  This was "the setup" that prompted the reader email...

I think all of the predictions that Webb will make for one of the Senate's most interesting senators are all probably true. There's a lot to admire about the guy. But, I also get the distinct impression that he will end up having a real political tin ear and turn out to be amazingly prickly. One small example: the networks keeps running this clip from his victory rally where he calls on the president to denounce the sort of negative campaigning which divided Americans in this election. It's a really, really lame soundbite — and the press probably deserves some grief for airing it so much. But it's telling. Here this guy just won this huge election, the Democrats are all on their "bipartisanship uber alles" talking points, Allen has just conceded graciously and called for unity, and here's Webb calling for Bush to denounce yesterday's news. There's no percentage in it. Nobody will want to talk about it. Bush isn't running for anything and asking the head of a party to, in effect, apologize for how it ran a losing campaign is deeply ungracious in political terms. The sense I got is that Webb is still peeved about the negative ads and he won't let it go — even on his day of victory. Recall that Webb couldn't last long as Secretary of the Navy either. Obviously, it's too soon to tell, but my guess is that within a year the conventional wisdom will be that he doesn't play well with others.
Posted by: .com   2006-11-11 03:24  

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