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Tag: John McCain (Page 14 of 22)

Why did John McCain refer to John Lewis?

At Saddlebrook, John McCain was asked by Rick Warren to name three wise men he would consult with if he were elected president. Strangely, John McCain spoke about John Lewis. Lewis responds:

In response to McCain’s latest invocation of his name, Rep. Lewis said in a statement requested by Mother Jones, “I cannot stop one human being, even a presidential candidate, from admiring the courage and sacrifice of peaceful protesters on the Edmund Pettus Bridge or making comments about it.” But, he added, “Sen. McCain and I are colleagues in the US Congress, not confidantes. He does not consult me. And I do not consult him.”

John Lewis is a hero, and it’s proper that McCain and other politicians would honor and respect him, but it’s certainly misleading for McCain to suggest he would consult with Lewis and rely on his counsel. He has not done so in the past, and they agree on very little so it’s obvious he wouldn’t do so much in the future. It doesn’t sound like a very honest answer.

McCain’s smears

For years, John McCain has enjoyed a great relationship with the press. Liberal commentators like Joe Klein and Jonathan Alter had great respect for McCain, and it was reflected in their commentary.

Both have turned on McCain, however, now that he has begun using all of the sleazy camapign tactics he once used to decry. McCain has sunk into the gutter, so Alter and other commentators are going after him.

Alter has an excellent article detailing the falsehoods in McCain’s ads.

For about a month, McCain’s campaign has been resorting to charges that are patently false. When Obama traveled abroad in July, to positive reviews, McCain decided he had to make attack ads that went far beyond the norm. In the past, plainly deceptive ads were the province of the Republican National Committee or the Democratic National Committee or independent committees free to fling mud that didn’t bear the fingerprints of candidates. But not this time. These smears come directly from the candidate.

First, a McCain ad charged that Obama was responsible for higher gas prices, which was not just false but absurd. Next, an ad said Obama had cancelled his trip to visit wounded soldiers in Germany because he couldn’t bring the press along. I was in Germany at the time, and as every reporter knew, the visit to the military hospital was never going to be open, not even to a press pool. It appeared on no press schedules. Obama had cancelled the visit when it was clear that the Pentagon viewed it as political. The charge was simply untrue.

The now famous Britney Spears and Paris Hilton ad, accusing Obama of being a celebrity, wasn’t false, just dopey. But it detracted attention from a string of false McCain spots on taxes. One ad said that Obama would raise taxes on electricity. Nope, not in Obama’s plan. Another said 23 million small-business owners would pay higher taxes under Obama. Factcheck.org found that the “vast majority” of small-business owners would pay the same in taxes as they do now, and “many” would pay less. An ad saying Obama had voted for a bill raising taxes, for families making more than $42,000 a year, was found to be “false.” And McCain’s consistent claim that Obama would “raise taxes on the middle class”–a major theme of his campaign–is “simply false,” according to this neutral policy center. In truth, under Obama’s plan, families earning less than $150,000 a year would get a tax cut, and only those making more than $250,000 would see their taxes rise. Maybe by the time the Democratic Congress got done with it, Obama’s tax program would look different. It’s reasonable to speculate that Democrats will raise taxes. But the McCain ads weren’t talking about that, they were talking about Obama’s plan, which is easily accessed on his Web site. McCain’s description of his opponent’s plan was and is untrue. This isn’t opinion, it’s fact.

The question is whether McCain will pay a price with independents for taking this approach. We’ll see. It helps if pundits like Alter keep letting him have it. We know that conservative commentators will not let up on Obama.

Did John McCain cheat at Saddlebrook? The “Cone of Silence” controversy deepens

This is starting to get interesting. The issue at hand is whether John McCain had the opportunity to learn about the questions asked at Rick Warren’s Saddlebrook forum before he took his turn. After a coin flip, Barack Obama went first, and then McCain was interviewed in the second hour. He was supposed to be in a “Cone of Silence” so that he would not have the advantage of hearing the questions ahead of time.

When Andrea Mitchell of NBC first reported that McCain was not in this protected cone of slince for the entire hour before he went onstage, the McCain campaign responded with very strong attacks on Mitchell and NBC News. Perhaps she hit a nerve? Other reporters are now hot on the story, and it’s clear that the McCain campaign has not issued a flat denial that he didn’t get information about the questions through other means like texting or cell phones. Perhaps they will clear that up.

However, most telling is the fact that the McCain campaign issued this statement:

Nicolle Wallace, a spokeswoman for Mr. McCain, said on Sunday night that Mr. McCain had not heard the broadcast of the event while in his motorcade and heard none of the questions.

“The insinuation from the Obama campaign that John McCain, a former prisoner of war, cheated is outrageous,” Ms. Wallace said.

As John Aravosis points out, the fact that McCain was a POW does not make him a saint. He is not beyond cheating, and given his past personal history it’s bizarre that the campaign would go down this road. McCain needs to make clear exactly what happened. Otherwise this story could blow up in his face.

McCain says life begins at conception

John McCain’s simple statement at Saddlebrook might open up a can of worms for him in the general election on the issue of abortion. He clearly placated conservatives with his answer, but it also brings up a host of issues regarding brith control and abortion that he may not want to get into.

As I mentioned before, his clear statement will potentially turn off thousands of independent pro-choice women.

But, as Nancy Gibbs points out in Time, McCain will now have to answer very complicated questions about birth control and stem-cell research that are raised by his bright-line definition. As we’ve seen, McCain is terrible on domestic issues when he needs to get into the details. He often contradicts himself, and he’s not very good at nuance in these areas. The abortion mine field could be a huge problem for him in the fall.

Of course, Obama will face his own issues on abortion, which may hurt him with Catholics and Reagan Democrats. He can only hope that McCain creates his own problems with this issue as well.

Rick Warren’s forum

Both Barack Obama and John McCain did well in Rick Warren’s forum, though McCain was clearly a crowd favorite as he was able to repeat conservative talking points to a mostly conservative crowd. He’s also no longer shy about discussing his time as a POW and he took many opportunities to bring that up. Obama also received plenty of applause, but he had to deal with questions on issues where he disagreed with evangelicals.

Warren had some interesting questions, but he never asked a follow-up question. If he asked a tough question, each candidate could say whatever they liked, because Warren didn’t want to play “gotcha.” In one sense that made it a civil conversation, but both candidates were able to say things without any fear of having the questioner challenge them, and that led to “stump speech” answers that weren’t very enlightening. McCain was able to ham it up with the conservative audience and basically tell them what they wanted to hear.

It will be interesting to see how this plays. Obama came across as thoughtful, but McCain really used it as a campaign event to beef up support with evangelicals. He probably scored points with conservatives, though independents might have been turned off by some of his answers. He drew a very hard line on abortion, which might hurt him with independent women.

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