Tomorrow, in an anticipated speech, Mayor Giuliani will address the Values Voter summit here in Washington, D.C. From what I've heard, Giuliani's speech may resemble the address he delivered earlier this year to the Conservative Political Action Conference. That would be a mistake. Granted, Giuliani's speech at CPAC took place at the beginning of the perpetual campaign, when hizzoner hadn't yet hit his stride. By contrast, Giuliani's recent performances, whether in debates, at the Republican Jewish Conference (RJC), or at the Americans for Prosperity conference, have been top notch. A speech with CPAC-like content and RJC-like delivery may win over some in tomorrow's crowd, or at least convince some in the crowd that Giuliani is not to be feared. There's another avenue Giuliani could take, however, which also could work out to his advantage. This would be to emphasize that, while he's neither a social conservative nor professes to be one, Giuliani and the social conservatives have similar political opponents: MoveOn.org, the liberal media, Hillary Clinton, the ACLU, and non-"strict constructionist" judges. More, Giuliani and the social conservatives have similar foreign enemies: Islamic terrorists and the Iranian and Syrian regimes, to name a few. Then hizzoner would have to make the case the he alone among the Republican candidates is able to best his domestic opponents and defeat his foreign enemies. It's a tall order, with no guarantee of success. But it's probably Giuliani's greatest hope of convincing this most important of GOP voting blocs that he is neither a threat nor an unknown quantity, but an ally.