AP: McCain Has Trouble With Details Because Of "Breezy Nature"

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CHARLES BABINGTON | July 30, 2008 03:10 PM EST | AP

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In this July 29, 2008 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks during a town hall meeting at the Reed High School in Sparks, Nev. Details can bedevil a presidential candidate, even for policies he supports. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

WASHINGTON — Details can bedevil any presidential candidate. Republican John McCain announced this week that he backs an anti-affirmative action referendum that has drawn sharp debate in Arizona, his home state. Then he added a curious note: He doesn't know that much about it.

And when McCain was asked earlier this month about insurance coverage for Viagra but not contraceptives, he admitted he wasn't sure about that issue, though he had once voted against requiring coverage for birth-control pills.

At times McCain can appear to be short on details. In some instances, he has made misstatements or eyebrow-raising comments during the long days of campaigning in front of cameras and microphones. Sympathetic listeners call them understandable slips of the tongue and question whether any candidate can know everything. Opponents call them gaffes, or worse.

"Every candidate, Barack Obama included, has shown they will make a misstatement," said McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds. "John McCain reads and internalizes enormous amounts of information about the most pressing regional, national and international issues every single day. He has an incredible skill in that regard."

Indeed, the McCain campaign, conservative Web sites and others have compiled lists of misstatements by his Democratic rival. Some appear to be minor slips, such as Obama's reference to America's "57 states," or his saying "Israel is Israel's friend," when he meant the United States.

More substantively, in discussing minority issues Obama has said on at least two occasions that more black men are in prison than in college, which is inaccurate.

Last week Obama cited a bill passed by the Senate Banking Committee, calling it "my committee," although he is not on that panel.

Some of McCain's remarks seem to stem from his generally breezy nature and occasional tendency to leave details to subordinates. A case in point is the pending referendum in Arizona, which would bar affirmative action efforts in state agencies' hiring, contracting and college admissions.

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Arizonans have debated the issue for years, and the referendum has been the subject of front-page stories in major Arizona newspapers. Much of the one-page text is government boilerplate, with the gist contained in the first sentence: "The state shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, color, sex, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting."

McCain, who has represented Arizona in Congress since 1983, took no stand on the referendum until last Sunday, when he was asked about it on ABC's "This Week." Sitting with McCain in Arizona, host George Stephanopoulos said: "Opponents of affirmative action are trying to get a referendum on the ballot here that would do away with affirmative action. Do you support that?"

McCain replied: "Yes, I do. I do not believe in quotas. But I have not seen the details of some of these proposals. But I've always opposed quotas."

"But the one here in Arizona you support," Stephanopoulos said.

"I support it, yes," McCain said.

On the question of Viagra versus birth-control pills, McCain was aboard his campaign bus on July 9 when a reporter asked about the fairness of insurance coverage for one but not the other.

"I certainly do not want to discuss that issue," said McCain, according to a CNN transcript.

The reporter replied, "But I think you voted against it."

"I don't know what I ..." McCain said. He rubbed his face while looking thoughtful. "I'll look at my voting record on it. But I have _ I don't recall the vote right now. But I'll be glad to look at it."

McCain has made other remarks that raised questions about his attention to details, or to aides who presumably alert him to errors. On three recent occasions he referred to "Czechoslovakia," a country that hasn't existed since 1993, when it became Slovakia and the Czech Republic. He also implied that the so-called "Sunni Awakening" in Iraq occurred after President Bush announced plans in 2006 for a surge in U.S. troops, when in fact it began several months before.

Steve Hess, a government professor at George Washington University and former speechwriter for President Eisenhower, said voters should not be terribly concerned about such misstatements by Obama or McCain.

"I always thought it amazing that these folks, who are out 15 hours a day, running for president, giving instant answers and speeches, don't slip up more often," he said. "The rest of us do."

"By and large they are small things, they are easily corrected, and you know that they know the right answer," Hess said. But major news outlets pay more attention to such missteps, he said, because if they do not, "you're one-upped by some amateur with a cell phone out there" who will "rush off to his or her Internet blog" with a juicy soundbite or video clip.

Because McCain is nearly 72, Hess said, some critics "are starting to build in a different narrative" about his misstatements or inattention to details. "Once you do that, it feeds on itself."

But he warned Democrats to be careful.

"I don't think the public gets too upset about calling a country Czechoslovakia even though it hasn't existed for a while," Hess said. Berating a candidate for such slips, he said, "can have a boomerang effect."

WASHINGTON — Details can bedevil any presidential candidate. Republican John McCain announced this week that he backs an anti-affirmative action referendum that has drawn sharp debate in Arizona...
WASHINGTON — Details can bedevil any presidential candidate. Republican John McCain announced this week that he backs an anti-affirmative action referendum that has drawn sharp debate in Arizona...
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McCain is far too much like Bush and obviously lacks the energy and the intelligence to lead this country out of the mess Bush has created.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 07/30/2008

Do you suppose you can hear the ocean when he yawns?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 07/30/2008
- doctorwang I'm a Fan of doctorwang 189 fans permalink
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I don't know about that, but I bet you can smell the sewerage treatment plant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 PM on 07/30/2008

Would that be the one in SF they're naming in "honor" of BOOOsh? Too FN Funny!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 07/30/2008

Breezy? That's an interesting choice of word. Didn't AP Washington Bureau Chief Ron Fournier describe his emails with Karl Rove as "breezy".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 07/30/2008
- aznurse I'm a Fan of aznurse 53 fans permalink

Was he the fellow that was offered a position in McCains campaign?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 07/31/2008
- CharlesJ I'm a Fan of CharlesJ 16 fans permalink
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The media needs to stop making excuses for McCain. McCain has made some real outlandish comments about Obama, the surge, Iraq, Iran, Afganistan, the economy, ... ect. When will the media remember their creed and report facts and hold those that live in a world of fiction accountable for what they say.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 07/30/2008
- ComnCents I'm a Fan of ComnCents 3 fans permalink
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Remember the "Find the Pope in the pizza" game?

It has been replaced by "Find the Dope in the cheese aisle”.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 07/30/2008
- JoDeeVa I'm a Fan of JoDeeVa 18 fans permalink
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..with Mayo on the side;}

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 07/30/2008
- morefromLA I'm a Fan of morefromLA 25 fans permalink
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Sorry, being old does not get him a pass unless it's out of the campaign and back to the Senate. Please make sure he doesn't go through Czechoslovakia and wind up in a time warp at the Iraq-Pakistan border.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 07/30/2008
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You know, of course, the Iraq-Pakistan border in very near to Shangri-La.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 07/30/2008
- bmora I'm a Fan of bmora 7 fans permalink
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I know how this song goes...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 07/30/2008
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I would prefer a president for whom details are important rather than one for whom details can be blown out of his mind with a gust of wind.

It's one thing for Obama to mistakenly say "57 states" instead of "57 primaries". That's a simple word subsititution, just as it is for McCain to have said "conservative liberal" instead of "conservative politician or Republican". Where it gets dangerous is when these slip ups are founded in a loose grasp of reality, such as McCain's confusion between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. At best, it's because he doesn't remember. At worst, it's because he doesn't understand.

I don't want a president who struggles with details that are that important. Obama has a far easier time picking up on these things than McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 07/30/2008

Breezy huh? I prefer a president who will be thoughtful, articulate, and have an IQ bigger than a cockroach. The only thing "breezy" about this one is the breeze running through his brain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 07/30/2008
- Openeyes I'm a Fan of Openeyes 19 fans permalink

You beat me to it! The sound of the wind whistling thru his ears.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:41 PM on 07/30/2008

I would settle for one with an IQ higher than his age.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 07/30/2008
- shengirl I'm a Fan of shengirl 10 fans permalink

Breezy nature? And this is what we need in the WH? Someone with a breezy nature who can't get facts straight? "We bombed Algeria? Sorry, I thought you meant Afghanistan. Why didn't my staff clarify it for me?" Windbag might be a better term.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 07/30/2008
- Totto I'm a Fan of Totto 40 fans permalink

Sen. Hothead's medical records need to released. PTSD? Dementia? Alzheimer's?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 07/30/2008

Oh please. Does any repug really think that McNinny is at all presidential? He is four years older than me, and that is more than a little scarry. Ohhhhhhhhh!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 07/30/2008
- BADEN I'm a Fan of BADEN 9 fans permalink

'BREEZY?"

Ahhhh the "RatPack" view of the world...

http://youtube.com/watch?v=LoVUld8bKhc

Or

"Dizzy"....
http://youtube.com/watch?v=2KxBMMtOdHA

Sooooooo 20th Century.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 07/30/2008

Is breezy an admirable trait in a commander in chief? No

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 07/30/2008
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We have just suffered more than 7 years of breezy arrogance and the jury has ruled we don't want any more of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 07/30/2008

Breezy? How about vacuous!?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 07/30/2008
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