It is an additional irony that the man who spent years railing against the ugly intolerance of the religious right over the past decade should now be bracketed with those very “agents of intolerance” that he once condemned.
Of course, Senator McCain is partly to blame for that himself. He has reined in his independent streak in the past year or two to make peace with his own party.
That may have helped him win the Republican primary, but it has weakened his ability to appeal to a dissatisfied broader electorate. He needs to move fast in the next few months to remind voters where his political instincts lie.
Whoever wins, 2008 is shaping up to be an election that is likely to mark a sharp turning point in American politics. The Bush era, the era of narrow Republican majorities won in a highly polarised country, is gone. By identity and by party, Senator Obama might be best placed to capitalise on the growing desire for change. But by his own character and record, it might be that his Republican rival, Senator McCain, is better placed to achieve it.
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