McCain a hit with his speech to conservatives

So I thought, watching maybe half of it yesterday.  Now in WSJ Political Diary, John Fund reports it was a hit with a surprising variety of big wigs:

“It was a great speech, with a perfect tonal pitch,” said Don Devine, a former Reagan administration official who is normally a dour pessimist when it comes to GOP electoral chances. “I think he could beat Hillary.” Ken Blackwell, a former GOP candidate for governor from Ohio, called the speech “the start of a great conversation with conservatives and much better than I expected.”

Even Tom DeLay, the former House Majority Leader who has clashed often with the Arizona senator in the past, grudgingly acknowledged that he might bring himself to vote for Mr. McCain in the fall — a major concession from someone who has publicly stated that the party’s new presumptive nominee has been “the most destructive force against [the GOP] of any elected official I know.”

It was “a thundering speech,” said Fund.  Ditto at this end.  Wow, in fact.  I heard him introduce his supporters in Boston on Monday and saw an accomplished speaker and in this case m.c. at work.  And substance:

“He said all the right things, and if he now delivers, we have a chance to unite the movement,” concluded Richard Viguerie, a conservative who spent much of the last few months denouncing most of the GOP field for apostasy.

It’s enough to get a guy interested.

Where voting patterns take two writers

Let us sharply contrast this on Obama and the Latino vote from Debra Dickerson, writing on Mother Jones Magazine’s MoJo blog,

Obama is running 3 to 1 behind Clinton among Latinos (25 percent of the electorate) in vote-rich California, for instance, with Super Tuesday looming. Similar realities confront him across America. If Obama wants to be the nominee—and survive his first term as Prez—he’ll have to close that gap without alienating blacks, a tightrope I would happily ask my worst enemy to walk. What’s the brother to do?

with this from the excitable and excited Mary Mitchell in Sun-Times,

[T]he upset [on Super Tuesday] was that Obama lost 2-1 among Latinos on the West Coast. Because California has a large Mexican-American population, as does Illinois, you would have expected Obama, a phenomenal field organizer, to have done a lot better than that.

That brings me to a sensitive topic: What role, if any, did racism play in the outcome of the Latino vote?

It brings her to that sensitive topic, but how many others?  How many blacks, how many non-blacks? 

For one thing, it’s old news.  She dates the tension to a 2003 survey, but it’s been an issue in Chicago for decades.  I recall the late Msgr. Jack Egan asking plaintively at an auditorium panel discussion (from the audience), how to address the black-Hispanic divide maybe 20 years ago.  He felt it was being overlooked.

Mitchell duly notes that in 1983, Latinos came out for Harold Washington in the general election, having largely sat on their hands in the primary.

“They rejected the bigotry,” [Congr. Luis] Gutierrez [an Obama supporter] said. “Those leaders who inspire hope allow us to overcome our innate bigotry and prejudices.”

Obama’s quest for the White House continues to force all of us to think more deeply about our views on race

concludes Mitchell, who makes it a quasi-moral issue.  That’s the problem here.  Dickerson, who is also black, stands astride no pulpit.  Mitchell can’t resist doing so.  In some circles that’s called nagging.

Chicago alternatives

Beachwood Reporter has a judicious analysis of media misfeasance in the recently decided state’s attorney race, won by asst. s.a. Anita Alvarez:

McCarron’s acknowledgement that if he had known what he knows now of Alvarez’s resume he might have voted for her only points up the failure of the local media to really invest themselves in this race. No wonder they’re surprised.

I know I held off writing about the race in the days before the election because I felt like I just didn’t have enough information about the candidates. The press blew this one.

He’s a web-only alternative medium reporting what’s said by a longstanding alternative in print and on web, Chi Reader.  This Beachwood fellow has a very good thing going, by the way.