South Carolina's Largest Newspaper Endorses John McCain

The two remaining contenders here happen to be the two strongest candidates ”” Mike Huckabee and John McCain. Gov. Huckabee is an exciting newcomer who shows a wonderful ability to connect with voters’ concerns, and Republicans could do far worse than to choose him. But his utter lack of knowledge of foreign affairs is unsettling.

It’s not just about Iraq and Afghanistan. As freshly demonstrated by the incident involving U.S. warships in the Strait of Hormuz last week and the assassination earlier of the opposition leader in the world’s most volatile democracy (which possesses nuclear weapons, and shelters Osama bin Laden), our commander in chief will need a far broader and deeper understanding of our relationship to the world than on-the-job training can adequately provide.

Clearly, the best Republican candidate to lead our nation at this time is U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona. He has the necessary experience, not just in time served, but in the quality of understanding he exhibits across the board.

Read it all.

Update: the local paper endorsed John McCain on Thursday in words that included these:

In fact, the senator clearly feels regular communication with the American people has been sorely lacking. He pledges press conferences at least once every two weeks and also said he would go on television once a week ”” even if only C-SPAN would cover it ”” to update the American people “on what’s happened where our young people are in harm’s way.”

In terms of national defense, what he describes as the ‘war against radical extremism’ would never be far from his thoughts. While he believes al-Qaida is on the run, “it is by no means defeated,” and Iraq will continue to be the central battleground. He is encouraged by signs that there is an increased recognition around the world about the nature of the struggle, and he is well equipped to make America’s case in the international arena. Certainly as the victim of vicious torture at the hands of the enemy, there is no one more credible to reassure this country and the world “that we will never torture another person in American custody.”

He has equal credibility on the domestic side, particularly for his opposition to wasteful spending in general and, specifically, such hot-button, pork-barrel earmarks as a $230 million Alaskan “bridge to nowhere.”

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Posted in * Economics, Politics, US Presidential Election 2008