Politics | Election 2008 Defeat Tastes Just Fine for Conservatives Movement in ruins, but pundits don't think America is liberal By Kevin Spak Posted Nov 5, 2008 12:40 PM CST Copied Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., delivers remarks during an election night rally in Phoenix Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson) How is the right wing coping with last night’s crushing defeat. They’re keeping a stiff upper lip, mostly. Here’s a sampling: Jonah Goldberg’s torn by two competing hopes: the hope that Obama will govern from the center, and the hope that Democrats will instead go hog-wild and “walk en masse into the rear rotor blade of a helicopter called the 2010 elections.” The public has “clearly rejected the Republican party,” but that doesn’t mean it’s embraced liberalism, say the National Review’s editors. Conservatives should work with Democrats if the agenda is centrist, but shouldn’t be “mealy-mouthed apologetic or timorous.” In fact, “conservatives should welcome tomorrow,” declares Michael Brendan Dougherty of the American Conservative, because it brings a choice for Republicans: “reform or be scattered to the winds.” Read These Next Tax season may actually bring good news for many this year. Angie Harmon reconnects with beau from when she was 18. Figure skating coach shot dead in Starbucks drive-thru. The Louvre's latest embarrassment: a $12 million fraud. Report an error