Sen. Evan Bayh (D-IN) lost out in the Democratic veepstakes. But on Wednesday night he was given a prime-time speaking slot and dutifully joined in the evening’s assault on John McCain:
George Bush and John McCain were wrong about going to war in Iraq, are wrong about how to get us out of Iraq, and wrong to ignore the dangers in Afghanistan. The time for change has come, and Barack Obama is the change we need.
But this was an odd line of attack, coming from Bayh. He was one of the co-sponsors of the 2003 Authorization of the Use of Military Force in Iraq (AUMF). Bayh wasn’t just attacking McCain. By condemning Bush and McCain for going to war in Iraq, Bayh was saying, “I was wrong.” Well, sort of. He wasn’t quite that explicit. And a great question for Bayh now would be, did you err, too?
And even in a speech that included a shot at McCain and Bush in almost every paragraph, Bayh did not launch as sharp an assault as he might have. He summed up the case against McCain this way:
John McCain, he’s not a bad man, but he is badly mistaken about embracing the Bush agenda.
The GOP blasts Barack Obama for being risky and dangerous (and not really an American). In Bayh’s view, McCain is a good guy who got some things wrong. Obviously, those two attacks don’t match up. Bayh didn’t define McCain in negative terms; he just disagreed with him. Can the Democrats win with that? A little more oomph might be needed.