John McCain in trouble for 2016

New polling indicates that Senior US Senator John McCain (R-AZ) is losing
popularity with Arizona voters, who
want a more conservative candidate representing them in Washington
:

Five-term incumbent Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has good
reason to fear a primary challenge. Newly released data from liberal-leaning
Public Policy Polling shows half of Arizona’s Republican primary voters
disapprove of McCain’s job performance, and more than half would prefer a more
conservative Senate candidate in 2016.

Five-term incumbent? No wonder McCain has gotten out of touch. Term limits
are not the answer, other than responsive voters expecting responsible
officials.

Arizona Republicans want a more conservative candidate, and only 37% of
Arizonans in general approve of McCain.

Why ever would they think that?

Let's start with his litany of bipartisan liberalized legislation with progressives
on an array of displaced issues.

He talks up climate alarmism, having draft legislation with retired Democrat
turned Independent Joe Lieberman of Connecticut. He also coauthored the
McCain-Feingold campaign finance "reform" legislation, which the
US  Supreme Court struck down in 2010 in Citizens United.

McCain also teamed up with now-deceased ultra-liberal Ted Kennedy on
immigration "reform". He also voted against the Bush tax cuts in 2001
and 2003, then signed off on the Medicare Part D expansion which the country
could not afford. On war issues, McCain has become a belligerent neocon who
shames anyone disputing immediate investment of armed troops into the Middle
East.

Let's not forget his stunningly stupid slur against US Senators Rand Paul
and Ted Cruz, calling them "Wacko Birds". Although he later
apologized, McCain has still shown himself to be more allied with big
government, establishment interests at the expense of conservative movements
around the country, including the Tea Party.

Conclusion: McCain has gone Washington for years, more interested in holding
onto power rather than representing the best interests of the people who
elected him.

Other reports earlier this year caught him purging Tea Party and
conservative Republican critics from the central committees and endorsing
bodies throughout Arizona, in another attempt to safeguard his reelection
chances for 2016.

McCain's non-conformity to the conservative cause reared its ugly head
before, when in 2010 he faced a primary challenge from a former Congressman and
radio host. McCain quickly changed his tune and shouted: "Build the dang
fence!" Three years after his election, he signed off on the Obamacare of
immigration bills, failing to reach the 70 votes threshold they had initially
promised.

McCain gest jittery around election time, and veers right to dampen a
primary fight, or at least curry enough favor to survive the primary and float
into reelection.

In 2015, with a more relentless media exposing his back-handed deals with
Democratic elements in the US Senate, plus the recent purge of Arizona GOP
committee groups from key leadership positions, it has become very clear that
McCain represents his own ambitions, no longer the best interests of his state.

McCain will face a tougher fight going into 2016, and with more
conservatives angry at Washington Republicans trying to keep the status quo
rather than change the culture of the upper chamber, the same voters who held
their noses for him in 2010 will be giving him the thumbs down the next go
around. 

A deeper question arises from the McCain dilemma: How can voters ensure that
US Senators remain connected and competent?

James Madison, Father of the Constitution

The Federalist Papers may assist us. Madison wrote in Federalist
62
that the US Senate would provide a check on federal authority against
the states:

It is recommended by the double advantage of favoring a select
appointment, and of giving to the State governments such an agency in the
formation of the federal government as must secure the authority of the former,
and may form a convenient link between the two systems.
 

In Federalist 63,
Madison charged that the US Senate projected an aura of national stability
before member nations in the world:

A fifth desideratum, illustrating
the utility of a senate, is the want of a due sense of national character.

US Senators were never supposed to respond to popular interest, but the
states. This process changed with the Seventeenth Amendment, prodded along by
progressives seeking to empower the popular vote, yet inadvertently
diminished individual influence as well as state sovereignty. The popular electorate
in general does not have the time or resources to pay attention and force their
senior representatives to focus on their proper duties and represent the best
interests of their state.

So, what to do?

Bill Whittle: "Give Back the Senate!"

Conservative news analyst Bill Whittle has
suggested it
, former
Governor Rick Perry briefly campaigned on
it, and even left-wing
Mother Jones
talked about the movement: repeal the Seventeenth Amendment,
and give back the US Senate to the states, not to the people.

Does the Constitution require this amendment repeal in order to bring
the US Senators back in line with respecting the enumerated powers of the US
Constitution, and limiting the spread of the federal leviathan into the daily
business of the states and the people?

Based on the recent attempts to unseat liberal-leaning Republicans like
Lindsey Graham in 2014, following the statewide rebuke from his own party, it
appears necessary to reinvigorate the power of state legislatures against Washington.

Conservatives could take advantage of repeal. In 2015, Republicans control
70% of the state legislatures, who would appoint US Senators reflecting their
numbers, and their values. Rather than direct election and all its adverse idiosyncrasies,
today there would be a marked supermajority of Republican US Senators in the
upper chamber, ready to override a number of Obama's unjust and unsound vetoes.

Ironically, by removing the power of the American People to elect their US
Senators, repeal of the 17th Amendment would inadvertently enhance the power of
the states and the people against Washington, including a rogue Democratic
President bent on his own agenda at the expense of the country and the US
Constitution.

It would also force US Senators like John McCain to uphold the Constitution
as well as their commitments to their constituents.

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