My first reaction to McCain's move was pretty enthusiastic. I thought he'd gambled on yet another unexpected tactic and come up ahead again.
But I think it's just not worked out well for him. Canceling on David Letterman might've been the clincher. "I can't do the interview, Dave, 'cause I gotta go back to Washington and fix this mess!"...and then Letterman shows the feed that clearly demonstrates McCain had lied to him. If he lied to Letterman about canceling that, maybe he was lying about needing to cancel the debate in the interest of our country. Maybe he's lying about needing to suspend the campaign. It's not a big leap to make. Suddenly what was statesmanlike looks gimmicky and desperate.
People laugh and say, "Oh, it's just a late night talk show host." And that's true. But it's also David Letterman, the longest running late night talk show host in America. A guy who clearly used to respect McCain. Having Letterman rant for two nights in a row about how McCain lied to him has exposed the fake sense of urgency the McCain campaign was trying to generate about McCain's new and critical involvement in the bailout.
The most interesting thing in all of this to me is Obama. He gets criticized (even by me) for being too cool, too aloof, too much of an intellectual. He never seemed excited by McCain's recent surge in the polls, nor the negative ads against him, nor this week's crazy events, nor McCain's campaign "suspension." He never got excited about Hillary, and only got into it with Rev Wright when all other options failed. People tell him he needs to get fired up, to get mad. And Obama ignores them all and does what he always does. He organizes, he says his one speech over and over again, and he stays calm. And he keeps winning.