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The End Of 9/11 Politics

by @ 9:08 am on January 30, 2008.

The Politco notes that the end of Rudy Giuliani’s Presidential campaign also may mark the end of the use of September 11th as a political issue:

Rudy Giuliani’s distant third-place finish in Florida may put an end to his bid for president, and it seems also to mark the beginning of the end of a period in Republican politics that began on Sept. 11, 2001.

Giuliani’s national celebrity was based on his steady, comforting appearance in Americans’ living rooms amid the terrorist attacks, and his campaign for president never found a message beyond that moment.

The emotional connection he forged that day, it seems, has proved politically worthless. After months of wonder that the former mayor seemed to have no ceiling to his support, he turned out to have no floor, trading fourth-place finishes with Ron Paul, a little-known Texas congressman.

“There’s a paradox for Rudy,” said former Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey, who was a member of the 9/11 Commission. “One of the things he did very well on 9/11 was say, ‘We’ve got to get back to normal.’ And that’s what’s happened. We’ve gotten back to normal.”

The problem for Rudy was that other than 9/11, Giuliani really had nothing to differentiate himself from the other candidates.  McCain had a better claim to be on top of the terrorism/national security issue than Giuliani ever did, and the idea that someone could go from being the retired Mayor of New York to President of the United States is, in retrospect, just a little absurd.

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