Op-Ed: John McCain Should Be the Next Commander in Chief
Feb. 26, 2007 — -- America faces an enduring battle for security and freedom. We require leadership with resolve and experience with wisdom. Our next president must have the ability and experience to direct a global war on terror, manage and complete a war in Iraq and command the respect of our troops and allies.
The safety of Americans at home and abroad, and the security and prosperity of our nation and families is the preeminent issue for the 2008 campaign. John McCain's experience and national defense credentials make him the most qualified person to serve as our next commander in chief.
As Republicans make their choice on whom to support in our primary, conservatives like myself will also consider fiscal concerns, social issues and governing philosophy. McCain's votes, words and actions consistently demonstrate a conservative commitment in each of these areas.
Few Republicans in Washington have the reputation of fiscal restraint that McCain has developed in his opposition to pork barrel spending. A theme throughout his Senate career, he fights against government waste and for a line-item veto, so the president can cut excessive spending.
A budget hawk and advocate for a balanced budget, McCain represents a return to the fiscal discipline so many conservatives saw missing in the most recent election. McCain believes in cutting spending, not increasing taxes, which is verified by his Senate record. He will return our party to the smaller government, lower spending policies advocated by our movement and trumpeted by leaders like former President Ronald Reagan.
McCain says, "when the government's budget is tighter, the family budget won't have to be. If our government is forced to make more hard choices, our families will be forced to make fewer." And I agree.
McCain has a 24-year pro-life record. NARAL Pro-Choice America and Planned Parenthood give him a zero percent rating. He supports a reversal of Roe v. Wade. His votes to ban partial birth abortion, support the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, require parental notification and prevent funding for the distribution of morning-after abortion pills in schools show his support of life is not just words, but actions over two decades of legislative service.
Six-term Congressman Chip Pickering serves as Mississippi state chairman and co-chairman of the Southern Region for McCain 2008. He was Mississippi co-chairman in 2000 and 2004 for Bush for President.