McCain Hampered By Campaign Missteps

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DAVID ESPO | June 21, 2008 12:47 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. addresses the Economic Club of Canada, Friday, June 20, 2008, in Ottawa, Canada. The centerpiece of his six-hour visit to Canada, the address was seen as a cross-border political attack as McCain criticized presumed Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., without mentioning him by name, for his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Fred Chartrand)

OTTAWA — Call it campaign growing pains. Or bad luck. Or a combination of the two.

By any name, Sen. John McCain is hampered by missteps and self-generated controversy in the early days of the general election campaign for the White House.

Take his most recent trip through several states and the Canadian capital, a five-day span during which he courted conservatives and independents alike, raised more than $10 million and began detailing his considerable differences with Sen. Barack Obama on energy policy.

Still, on Tuesday, he criticized his rival for proposing a windfall profits tax on the oil industry. The attack was complicated by McCain's earlier statement that he would consider the same thing.

The following day, he met with a group of Hispanics in Chicago. Aides who had kept word of the event secret were placed on the defensive within hours after one participant criticized some of McCain's comments.

On Thursday, the Arizona senator flew to Iowa, a likely battleground state in the fall, where he expressed sympathy with victims of severe flooding and pledged support for federal recovery aid. The event was overshadowed by President Bush's appearance elsewhere in the same state on the same day.

Friday's trip to Canada brought more controversy.

McCain arrived aboard his chartered campaign jet, yet told reporters at a news conference, "this is not a political campaign trip." The senator added he didn't feel it was appropriate to have the government to pay "while I am the nominee of my party."

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The centerpiece of the six-hour visit was a speech to the Economic Club of Canada that amounted to a cross-border political attack. McCain criticized Obama, without mentioning him by name, for his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement.

"Demanding unilateral changes and threatening to abrogate an agreement that has increased trade and prosperity is nothing more than retreating behind protectionist walls," he said.

McCain's schedule also included mention of an unspecified "finance event." While that is customarily campaign jargon for a fundraiser, foreigners may not donate to U.S. candidates, and one aide was quoted in advance as saying that money from $100-per-person event would simply defray the cost of the earlier luncheon.

The non-fundraiser, which may or may not have cost $100 to attend, was held on the top floor of a building with a commanding view of the city skyline. McCain said he knew some of those in attendance had homes in Arizona in the cold weather, and at one point, referred to his campaign themes of "reform, peace and prosperity."

Even some Republicans have cringed in recent weeks at the campaign's efforts to ramp up for the fall campaign, although they will speak only privately.

McCain's aides minimize the difficulties.

One top aide, Mark Salter, said if McCain had not gone to Iowa, he would have looked indifferent to "a great natural calamity and the suffering it has caused." The senator has frequently criticized Bush for his administration's response to Hurricane Katrina.

Salter also said McCain had told the Hispanic audience nothing about immigration that he hasn't told dozens of town hall audiences. He blamed the dustup on a member of the Minuteman organization that opposes giving illegal immigrants any path to legal status.

Salter noted that the speech in Canada contained no overt mention of Obama.

McCain himself told reporters late in the week he remains opposed to the windfall profits tax.

Not that Obama and the Democrats weren't trying to stir controversy at every step.

By the time the sun fell on the day of the Iowa trip, an aide to Gov. Chet Culver said the Democrat had privately relayed a request to McCain to cancel his plans to avoid diverting law enforcement personnel from recovery efforts. Salter said the visit had been cleared in advance by local officials.

And McCain was still on Canadian soil when the Democratic National Committee announced it was filing a Freedom of Information Act request for State Department records detailing the involvement of Ambassador David Wilkins during the trip.

That sort of guerrilla tactic is routine in any presidential campaign. Republicans spent much of the week, for example, drawing attention to Obama's announcement that he would reject public campaign funding for the general election, a major reversal.

And in truth, no candidate can expect to make it through a grueling presidential campaign without suffering one or two self-inflicted wounds _ the most grievous of which are far worse than anything that has happened to McCain.

Republican President Gerald Ford's declaration in 1976, at the height of the Cold War, that there was "no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe" was a memorable one.

Or more recently Democratic Sen. John Kerry's decision to go windsurfing in 2004, an event that Republicans turned into a metaphor for a politician who shifts with the wind.

Obama himself spent days in the Democratic primary race trying to explain away remarks he made at a closed-door fundraiser that small-town Americans who were bitter over their economic plight turned to religion.

Republicans took notice of that one, and Obama can expect to hear more about that moment in the fall.

Arguably, McCain has yet to make that kind of gaffe despite enduring a candidacy of remarkable adversity in which he went from front-runner to the campaign cellar and back again.

And for all the talk his critics like to stir about his temper, he never betrayed a hint of displeasure as he made his campaign rounds during the week.

Not even when one man at a Minnesota fundraiser upbraided him for opposing oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

"Thank you for that question," McCain replied.

____

Editors Note _ David Espo covers presidential politics for The Associated Press.

OTTAWA — Call it campaign growing pains. Or bad luck. Or a combination of the two. By any name, Sen. John McCain is hampered by missteps and self-generated controversy in the early days of the ...
OTTAWA — Call it campaign growing pains. Or bad luck. Or a combination of the two. By any name, Sen. John McCain is hampered by missteps and self-generated controversy in the early days of the ...
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WHO CARES!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 06/24/2008

McCain's smile is so not him. It looks like a forced smile, rather than a spontaneous smile. He just does not have a genuinely smiling personality. Surely he is smart enough to know people are able to differentiate a smile coming from the center of one's being versus one that does not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 06/24/2008
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John McCain’s Beer company has opposed such groups as Mothers Against Drunk Driving in fighting proposed federal rules requiring alcohol content information on every package of beer, wine and liquor.
Its executives, including John McCain's son Andrew, have written at least 10 letters in recent years to the Treasury Department, have contributed tens of thousands of dollars to a beer industry political action committee, and hold a seat on the board of the politically powerful National Beer Wholesalers Assn.
Hensley has run afoul of health advocacy groups that have tried to rein in appeals to young drinkers. For example, the company distributes caffeinated alcoholic drinks that public health groups say put young and underage consumers at risk by disguising the effects of intoxication.
The involvement of McCain's family in federal regulatory issues could create a conflict of interest for a future McCain administration, according to advocacy groups and political analysts. McCain has recused himself for many years on alcohol issues in the Senate. As president, however, McCain would face far more difficulty distancing himself from an issue with such broad scope.
Can John McCain run a beer company and also be president?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 06/24/2008

McCain is a good man. He is a great man and great American. God bless him for everything he has done. It is just not his time to be President. His time already came and America needs to go in a different direction then the one he is best qualified to lead us towards.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 06/24/2008
- amcg50 I'm a Fan of amcg50 16 fans permalink
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Don't get over confident; remember how McCain looked early on in the campaign against the other Republicans! He rebounded....

Keep pushing and don't underestimate the McCain campaign and the 527's that will be supporting him...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 AM on 06/24/2008
- steve12 I'm a Fan of steve12 12 fans permalink

It is unfortunate that the McCain of 2000 is not running for President. That candidate was truly a maverick and had a number of good ideas that distinguished him from the rest of the GOP flock. Unfortunately, this new McCain 2008 is a complete reversal of the McCain that I might have often disagreed with, but highly respected.

Maybe after McCain 2008 loses the election, that a McCain 2000 will rise out of its shell, as he returns to the Senate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 06/24/2008

This HuffPo post is a great little McCain Valentine. "Campaign growing pains," "bad luck"???

How about arrogance and incompetence? How about poor judgment? How about he's just being who he really is -- and old guy, a little out of touch with reality at present, whose head is stuck in the Cold War and the Vietnam struggle.

Every misstep of McCain or his campaign was dismissed or handed off as not as bad as what others have done.

OK, so this is commentary and opinion. The writer is entitled to say it the way he wants.

But I don't have to buy it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 06/24/2008
- jeanrenoir I'm a Fan of jeanrenoir 101 fans permalink

McCain is the weakest, most incompetent nominee of either party in my lifetime (I'm 64). He's actually even worse on the campaign trail than W was. Like Nixon, McCain has a hard core of resentful VFW Archie Bunker supporters who would rather die than vote for a black man or a Democrat, but to fair-minded Americans, it is going to be increasingly obvious that McCain's simply an embarrassment, offering a Third Bush Term in the most ludicrous reductio ad absurdum sense. McCain's already an even greater gift to TV comedy than Bush has been. By election day, he'll be a complete laughing stock for any voters not so choked by lower-class white resentment that they refuse to admit McCain's failure, for the same reason they held out so long in facing Nixon's: because both failures reflected so badly on these dumb voters themselves, and they would rather die than give their hated left-wing enemies the satisfaction of victory in any sense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 06/23/2008
- liseworks I'm a Fan of liseworks 143 fans permalink
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So how do you really feel about the guy ? LOL - kidding.
PS - I agree with it all !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 06/24/2008
- liseworks I'm a Fan of liseworks 143 fans permalink
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"Arguably, McCain has yet to make that kind of gaffe despite enduring a candidacy of remarkable adversity in which he went from front-runner to the campaign cellar and back again".

I beg to differ ! :
I still can't forget McCain's horrendous comment regarding our troops : "hopeful we'll never again have to send our troops to the Mid-East to die ....for oil".

How did the Media let him get away with that one ? - barely a day's worth of coverage & .....it was an appalling "gaffe" & clearly betrays "what we weren't supposed to know" -

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 06/23/2008
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I have two words for McTwisty: Nursing Home.

I hear there are some really nice ones out there. And the good news is that when you contradict yourself, the residents won't remember a thing you say!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 06/23/2008
- christieZ I'm a Fan of christieZ 6 fans permalink

"Arguably, McCain has yet to make that kind of gaffe despite enduring a candidacy of remarkable adversity in which he went from front-runner to the campaign cellar and back again."

UMMMMM...ESPO, ARE YOU ON DRUGS? The gaffes are constant. It's just that McCain's "base" has yet to publicize any of them to even a fraction of the extent that they would've if Obama or Clinton had made the same mistakes. What a crock.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 06/23/2008
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McTwisty wouldn't last five minutes under the microscope they put on BHO or HRC.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 PM on 06/23/2008
- liseworks I'm a Fan of liseworks 143 fans permalink
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Right you are - !!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 06/23/2008
- nerakami I'm a Fan of nerakami 14 fans permalink

*McCain against drilling for oil and then for it (matter of weeks)
*McCain used to oppose Bush’s tax cuts for the very wealthy, but he reversed course in February.
*McCain criticized TV preacher Jerry Falwell as “an agent of intolerance” in 2002, but has since decided to cozy up to the man who said Americans “deserved” the 9/11 attacks. (Indeed, McCain has now hired Falwell’s debate coach.)
*McCain supported a major campaign-finance reform measure that bore his name. In June, he abandoned his own legislation.
*McCain took a firm line in opposition to torture, and then caved to White House demands.
*McCain was anti-ethanol. Now he’s pro-ethanol.
*And now he’s both for and against overturning Roe v. Wade.

It's funny they are calling these missteps.... yet Obama's decision against public funding is a flip- flop...
McCain has changed positions numerous times at the drop of a hat depending on which group he needs to win over.

Let's not get it twisted we know who the REAL McFlip Flop is...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 AM on 06/23/2008
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Apparently McTwisty has to beat a toddler on camera for anything to register with the MSM, and even then, they would find away to explain it away. Absolutely pathetic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 06/23/2008

Also, why hasn't any major news outlet covered the Obama campaign sending their volunteers to help with the flooding in Iowa?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 06/23/2008
- shelobo I'm a Fan of shelobo 8 fans permalink

Because it would show the public that the man does care ? Obama was in Illinois BEFORE McCain visted ,he even helped fill snadbags at one flooded area. http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30200-1319093,00.html ,he didn't fly over with Bush like McCain did after Katrina hit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 06/23/2008
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Thank You for keeping us inform on Obama's response to the flood in Iowa.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 06/23/2008

Call it being the wrong guy for the job at this time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 AM on 06/23/2008
- Dane1911 I'm a Fan of Dane1911 7 fans permalink

McCain didn't love his country...­.....check this out,....from his own mouth on different occassions.....




http://youtube.com/watch?v=UkPUBn3vyoM

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 06/22/2008
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Seems that McCain learned to truly appreciate his country when made a prisoner.
In Michelle Obama's case, the promise of wealth and power.

Though this is good news for republicans, as an American politician with dubious affection for his country is a particularly attractive candidate in the eyes of the far-left.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:02 AM on 06/23/2008
- egal I'm a Fan of egal 13 fans permalink
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McCain has made more of those disastrous misstatements than even our current president...it's just that nobody cares. Which is so glaringly obvious I expect the author ROFLOLed while writing the above satire.

Request: could the people writing these "articles" please, please join the news media in taking English grammar lessons? It's pretty self-defeating to make fun of candidates for misspeaking when the people making the accusations can't tell the difference between "turning" to guns and religion versus "clinging" to guns and religion. The latter implies an unhealthy obsession and presumes that there's nothing inherently bad about guns, religion, or the people who love them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 06/22/2008
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