A quick sample of what conservative opinion-makers are saying about the Thrilla in New Hampsha:

In an NRO “Symposium,” Michael Graham and Kate O’Beirne call it for Giuliani. Graham says Rudy seemed “confident, funny, a regular guy who gets it.” O’Beirne is touched by the mayor’s concern for the oppressed, by which she means Scooter Libby: “He showed an appropriate passion about an injustice.” She also reports that Rudy “was most effective in taking arguments to the Democrats.” Human Events editor Terrence Jeffrey, on the other hand, gets the willies over Giuliani’s enthusiasm for “nation-building,” while John Pitney wonders whatever became of the fiscal conservatives:

Conservatives believe in limited government. Yet we learned little about specific plans to cut spending…. None of them named a major program that deserves the ax.

Strictest of constructionists Ed Whelan is not buying what Giuliani’s selling when it comes to judicial nominations, remarking that “Giuliani seems intent on making it as difficult as possible for proponents of judicial restraint to take seriously his talk about appointing ’strict constructionists.’” But strategist Patrick Ruffini thinks Giuliani did great:

Rudy keeps getting better and better. He went straight at the Democrats on terror, and did so credibly…. He was the only one to lay a glove on McCain on immigration, broadening it into a critique of Washington…. His lengthy critique of the Fitzmas farce … showed leadership. Before Rudy, none of the candidates said they would pardon Scooter Libby. After him, most of them said they’d consider it. He also showed how you can talk health care and please the base.

Most commentators seem to think McCain did well enough for a solid second place, despite the immigration-related cloud building over his campaign. Only Frank Luntz’s focus group chose Romney as the winner.

Human Events political editor John Gizzi thinks the whole thing was borrrrrring. The Weekly Standard’s Fred Barnes agrees:

But where were the digs, the quips, the cheap shots at rivals? Where was personal animosity?

Barnes thinks McCain did the best, with a “forceful but not overbearing” performance. As for Huckabee, who by all accounts has been performing well in the debates (evolution schtick notwithstanding), Barnes says:

My guess is that Huckabee’s skill and humor in debates, interviews, and stump speeches will give him a future in national politics. But it’s unlikely to be one that involves living in the White House.

Think about this. Here we have perhaps the most politically skilled evangelical presidential candidate in a long time — ever, probably — and yet he’s being dismissed as an afterthought, even while conservative pundits spin furiously on behalf of the candidate who has openly rejected the core tenets of the Christian right. Things are changing in the conservative movement — or maybe it’s just that the conservative elites’ contempt for their party’s fundamentalist “foot soldiers” is finally being laid bare.

The whole affair, meanwhile, was haunted by the specter of an actor. No, not that one. Well, actually, that one too. That one especially.

Cross-posted at Alien & Sedition.

4 Responses to “Last Night’s Debate: Reaction from the Right”

Excellent post, Paul.

I watched some of the CNN post-show and I’ve got to agree with Arianna who said McCain was the winner. She cited his eloquent (and brave, considering his audience) defense of a path to citizenship as one of the things that elevated his performance above the others. Of course, that’s also the thing that will turn him off to primary voters, so I guess by winning McCain really lost.

Thanks, Matt.

“by winning McCain really lost” — that seems to keep happening to McCain. I don’t the GOP base, culturally as much as policy-wise, will allow McCain to communicate with the mainstream without punishing him. And signs are that the immigration thing is really going to hit him hard.

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