WASHINGTON (CNN) September 30, 2008 —
The House's failure to pass a $700
billion bailout package Monday not only
held back billions for Wall Street, but
also was a major blow to Sen. John
McCain's presidential campaign.
The Republican presidential nominee
raised the stakes for himself last week
when he suspended his campaign and
returned to Washington for negotiations
over a solution to the financial crisis.
"Even before the House vote, voters
blamed Republicans more than Democrats
for the crisis. Then McCain suspended
his campaign to come back to Washington
to rally support for a rescue plan,"
said Bill Schneider, a CNN political
analyst. "He failed, so he gets blamed
by both supporters and opponents of the
rescue plan."
During a campaign event in Des Moines,
Iowa, on Tuesday, McCain appeared to
distance himself from Monday's House
vote, saying the congressional inaction
had "every American and the entire
economy at the gravest risk."
"Yesterday, the country and the world
looked to Washington for leadership, and
Congress once again came up
empty-handed," he said.
But over the weekend, McCain had
involved himself in the efforts to get
the bailout package to the president's
desk.
Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, the top
Republican in the House, said that
McCain was actively involved in lobbying
Republican House members Sunday to line
up behind the bailout.
"He has been making calls to members in
support of this bill ... and I'm
grateful for his support," Boehner said.
But it was a majority of McCain's own
Republicans in the House who voted
against the bailout by a 2-1 ratio
Monday afternoon, leaving the outcome of
the bailout in doubt and sending the
stock market diving 778 points. Despite
McCain's lobbying efforts, 133 House
Republicans voted against the bill.
After the vote, McCain was defensive,
accusing his Democratic rival, Sen.
Barack Obama, of just wanting to "phone
it in" when it came to the bailout and
introducing partisanship into the
process.
"Senator Obama and his allies in
Congress infused unnecessary
partisanship into the process. Now is
not the time to fix the blame. It's time
to fix the problem," the Arizona
Republican said after the vote.
But on Tuesday morning, McCain said the
bill failed "because we haven't
convinced people that this is a rescue
effort, not just for Wall Street, but
for Main Street America, for working
families, for small businesses, for the
heartland of America.
"I may fail a first or second or third
time, but we have to get this job done
for America. And I have a plan to
restore our economy," McCain added.
Before the House vote, McCain was losing
ground to Obama because of the
increasingly bad economic news. A
CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll
conducted September 19-21 found that
Obama was leading McCain 51 percent to
46 percent. Earlier, after the
Republican convention, the two had been
tied in the polls.
And the CNN poll found that Obama leads
McCain 49 percent to 43 percent among
those surveyed when asked who had showed
better judgment in the economic crisis.
Terry Jeffries, a Republican strategist
and CNN contributor, also said McCain
may have hurt himself among
conservatives by losing sight of his
party's free-market principles.
"I think that John McCain failed to
lead," Jeffries said. "He should be
right there pushing the principles, and
the conservatives in the House are doing
that right now."
While Obama and McCain have mostly
agreed on the principles of the bailout,
Obama has mostly stayed out of
negotiations and has used the financial
crisis to attack the economic policies
of the Bush administration and tie
McCain to the unpopular President Bush.
"He didn't put himself in that process.
He was smart enough to realize he
couldn't control the House Republicans
or Democrats," said Ed Rollins, another
Republican strategist and CNN
contributor.