Republican Sen. McCain woos old foes in South Carolina
Posted on: Tuesday, 17 January 2006, 12:22 CST
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent
SPARTANBURG, South Carolina (Reuters) - Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona, an early favorite in a wide open 2008 presidential race, hunted for new friends and courted some old foes on a visit to the state that sunk his last White House bid.
McCain traveled on Monday to the heart of conservative upstate South Carolina, a region where he was crushed by President George W. Bush in a bitter 2000 primary battle, to preach his political message of fiscal restraint, legislative accountability and patience in Iraq.
Two years before the first votes are cast in the nomination battle, McCain tops the potential Republican presidential pack in many national polls -- mostly a result of his high name recognition.
But the road to the White House runs through South Carolina's early primary again in 2008, and McCain's visit to Spartanburg was the first step toward winning over the state's conservative Republicans who rejected him in 2000.
"Having run before and served in the U.S. Senate, McCain will start out as a front-runner nationally and that translates to South Carolina," said Warren Tompkins, a Republican consultant who worked for Bush in 2000.
"But conservatives look at him, rightly or wrongly, with a question mark. Is he really one of us?" he said.
Rick Beltram, chairman of the Spartanburg County Republicans, said some of the group's conservative members skipped a party dinner featuring McCain, which still drew a crowd of more than 600 people.
McCain's maverick reputation, outspoken style and moderate image sunk him in South Carolina in 2000, when the state's party establishment lined up behind Bush in a brutal battle that left McCain and his supporters fuming.
CONSERVATIVE EMPHASIS
But in recent years McCain has emphasized his conservative positions on social issues and frequently served as a loyal Bush team player. He bucked the White House on its torture policy, but campaigned hard for the president in 2004 and has been one of his biggest supporters on Iraq.
In his speech on Monday, McCain praised Bush's moves on Iraq and federal judges, and called for reining in runaway government spending and reforming corrupt lobbying practices that have sparked a widening political scandal.
Many Bush supporters in Spartanburg, the center of the conservative region where McCain performed worst in 2000, noted McCain's turnaround and said he seemed to have found the right tone.
"He has changed with the times, and people appreciate his support for President Bush and for the troops in Iraq," said Mike Campbell, a candidate for lieutenant governor and son of former Gov. Carroll Campbell, a Bush supporter in 2000. "If he ran on the same message as before, he would probably have a hard time here."
Robert Farris, a Greenville developer and Bush supporter in 2000, said McCain had "mellowed" since the last campaign.
"This reform mantra that he has come forward with, curtailing spending and getting us back on a plan of fiscal restraint, I think that is the right message," Farris said.
Several Republicans said they were interested in the potential candidacy of Sen. George Allen of Virginia, a conservative and fellow Southerner. But they promised to give McCain a chance if he decides to run in 2008.
"There have been so many conservatives who have disappointed us, I think people are willing to give him a look," said Mike Dixon, a Spartanburg insurance agent.
McCain has a potent ally in Sen. Lindsey Graham, a close friend who was a junior House member in 2000 but is now the state's senior senator. South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, who attended the dinner, said the bitterness from the last race was gone.
"John got a very positive reception in the heart of what is the conservative base of our state," Sanford said after the dinner.
John Weaver, McCain's longtime political adviser, said he did not think the senator faced a greater hurdle in South Carolina then elsewhere and he would make an effort to mend fences from 2000.
"We would be naive to think that among the combatants down here there still wouldn't be some hard feelings," Weaver said. "But I wouldn't trade positions with anybody else who is thinking of running at this point."
Source: REUTERS
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