Giuliani's hopes of becoming

the Republican candidate were killed off

by coming in third place

He is expected to drop his campaign today

and endorse McCain in a move

which will boost the former prisoner of war's

chances in New York and New Jersey


McCain: Last of the Cold Warriors

Any Republican president would be a disaster, but McCain would be the biggest disaster of all, because, both by who he is and what he professes, he encourages the US, as Reagan did, to engage in sentimental, nostalgic wishful thinking about the effects of American "goodness" and "power".

The nation, which is at last waking up to the disasters of the last twenty-eight years--the disasters of the "free market" and "making the world safe for democracy" as a cover for ruthless exploitation of all natural resources no matter where they are and who owns them--would succumb the fantasy again, at least long enough for those disasters to be compounded and rendered absolutely unfixable.

McCain is a walking delusion--that we really are brave, that we meant well, that mistakes were made but the policies themselves were sound.

McCain reassures us that we weren't so bad after all, when we were. We can't come to terms with why the US is in the pickle it is in without consigning McCain to the dustheap.

McCain has distinguished himself most as an über-hawk on foreign policy.

To give a brief smorgasbord of his views: at a recent rally, he sang "Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran," to the tune of the Beach Boys' "Barbara Ann". He says North Korea should be threatened with "extinction".

McCain has mostly opposed using US power for humanitarian goals, jeering at proposals to intervene in Rwanda or Bosnia – but he is very keen to use it for great power imperialism.

He brags he would be happy for US troops to remain in Iraq for 100 years, and declares: "I'm not at all embarrassed of my friendship with Henry Kissinger; I'm proud of it."

His most thorough biographer – and recent supporter – Matt Welch concludes:

"McCain's programme for fighting foreign wars would be the most openly militaristic and interventionist platform in the White House since Teddy Roosevelt...

"It is considerably more hawkish than anything George Bush has ever practised."

With him as president, we could expect much more aggressive destabilisation of Venezuela and Bolivia – and more.

Giuliani expected to endorse Florida winner McCain

Rudy Giuliani is expected to throw his weight behind John McCain's campaign for the Republican nomination after the senator for Arizona won a convincing victory in the Florida primary to become the clear front runner.

McCain now goes into next week's Super Tuesday contest with huge momentum behind him after beating Mitt Romney in the biggest primary so far.

Giuliani's hopes of becoming the Republican candidate were killed off by coming in third place. He is expected to drop his campaign today and endorse McCain in a move which will boost the former prisoner of war's chances in New York and New Jersey.

With 99% of the vote in McCain had 36% , Romney 31%, and Giuliani, who was the Republican favourite throughout most of last year, lagging well behind on 15%. Mike Huckabee, who said he would fight on, was on 13%.

At a party to celebrate his victory, McCain said: "Our victory may not have reached landslide proportions but it is sweet nonetheless."

McCain, the senator for Arizona, emerged from the often chaotic Republican field to establish himself in the lead. It is the first time since the race began in Iowa at the start of the month that the party has had a clear front-runner.

Giuliani, conceding defeat at a party in Florida, said he was proud to have fought a "positive" campaign but gave no hint of his intentions.

Romney, who also conceded the primary to McCain, devoted a speech to supporters in St Petersburg, Florida, to pointing up the differences between him and McCain, mainly over economic experience. "I have spent my entire life in the economy. The economy is in my DNA," he said.

The impending economic recession was the biggest issue in the Florida, one on which McCain is weak on.

The last few days of the campaign in Florida, the fourth most populous state in the country, were the most acrimonious yet in the Republican race, with Romney, trying to win over social conservatives, labelling McCain as a "liberal democrat" and inexperienced in economics, the biggest election issue. McCain responded by claiming Romney had "flipflopped" over the Iraq war.

McCain's win provides him with an enormous advantage going into next week's Super Tuesday contest, in which about half the country will be eligble to vote.

Romney, with millions of a personal fortune behind him, will attempt to revive his campaign over the next week with one of the biggest advertising blitzes in history.

Last night was a humiliation for Giuliani, who invested all his time and effort into Florida and ignored the other early contests.

He is scheduled to take part in a Republican televised debate in California tonight and his campaign manager, Mike Duhaime, insisted he still intended to participate.

Giuiani adopted an unconventional strategy for the early caucuses and primaries which turned out to be a catastrophic gamble.

Unlike his rivals, he chose to ignore the traditional campaign schedule that begins with Iowa and continues through New Hampshire and South Carolina.

The former New York mayor had anticipated taking Florida, helped by the large number of ex-residents from that city who retired to the state, and then going on to win New York, New Jersey and California on SuperTuesday, February 5.

But by the time his rivals arrived in Florida ten days ago from a highly-competitive contest in South Carolina, they had built up too much momentum and gained lots of media exposure denied to Giuliani sitting waiting for them in Florida.

Huckabee, the Baptist pastor and surprise winner of Iowa, also did badly.

He could not compete in terms of the money needed for ads in such a huge state and was not even in Florida to hear the results, instead watching them on television in St Louis, Missouri, one of the Super Tuesday states.

He signalled at a meeting with supporters that he would fight it out on Super Tuesday in the mainly southern states where he can exploit his appeal among Christian evangelicals. "This story is not close to being over," he said.

Romney and McCain had been battling it out for the last few days, travelling round the huge state by plane, stopping for short campaign rallies.

McCain won New Hampshire on January 8 and South Carolina on January 19, both of them hotly contested and both part of the traditional track to the Republican nomination. Romney took Wyoming, Michigan and Nevada, none of them regarded as serious contests by most Republicans.