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McCainiacs

HRC's campaign is not the only one getting some extra scrutiny this week. Jason Zengerle of The New Republic has done a major article analyzing the personnel and strategy of John McCain's campaign. He unravels the complex John Weaver-Rick Davis rivalry that's been at the center of the campaign's various purges and power struggles. And he also explains the odd Davis-driven decision to organize the general election campaign around a "regional autonomy" model that sounds a bit like one of those plans for stabilizing Iraq.

One thought I had after reading Jason's fine piece is that it's clear McCain's back-from-the-grave nomination victory will tend to freeze the current campaign structure, leadership, strategy and message into place even if they aren't necessarily right for the general election. That, after all, is how John Kerry wound up going into the 2004 general election with a questionable campaign structure, leadership, strategy and message. At about this stage four years ago, I can remember some Kerry supporters muttering to each other things like: "How can you convince a candidate his campaign is making potentially fatal mistakes when he's just won the nomination after being left for dead?" I wonder if any McCainiacs are muttering similar things to each other today.

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