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July 24, 2008 2:12:44 PM CDT



McCain 2008 track this thread

Started by C Miller; Last updated Jun 6, 08 1:26 PM CDT by K Schwartz | View history

McCain 2008

"I will be our party's nominee." -John McCain

McCain secured the Republican nomination thanks to a decisive win over former nominee Mike Huckabee. But with the star power and oratory smarts of Obama, how will the 72-year-old senator handle the competition?

Stories

Stories 401 - 420 of 710

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  • March 2008
    • Pundits Spar Over McCain as Dubya Redux

      Pundits Spar Over McCain as Dubya Redux

      John McCain’s foreign-policy address Wednesday split watchers, with David Brooks, in the New York Times , declaring the Republican candidate a breath of fresh air and Glenn Greenwald, in Salon, seeing four more years of George W. Bush. Brooks says the “personal, nuanced and ambitious speech” shows McCain to be a JFK-style internationalist, highlighting maverick criticism of the Iraq war in late 2003. More »

    • Al Gore, Dems' Back-Up Plan

      Al Gore, Dems' Back-Up Plan

      If the Democratic nomination isn’t wrapped up before August's convention, the party might have a third choice: the one they crowned in 2000. If Barack Obama is too bloodied and Hillary Clinton too divisive, Joe Klein writes in Time , a superdelegate coup could yield an Al Gore-Obama ticket on the spot. Of course, the party would have to be “monumentally desperate.” More »

    • This Is Your Life, John McCain

      This Is Your Life, John McCain

      John McCain will take a tour of his own biographical highlights, reports USA Today. His campaign intends the “Service to America” tour of schools and military installations to help the candidate define his brand before the Democrats do—and help offset a significant fundraising disparity. He will visit places that have “played a significant role in shaping who I am today," he told potential donors. More »

    • Romney, McCain Join Forces

      Romney, McCain Join Forces

      John McCain and Mitt Romney buried the hatchet and hit the campaign trail together in Utah yesterday. Romney thumped McCain 90% to 5% in the state's Republican primary, but he's now stumping and fundraising for his former rival in a week-long trip through the West, AP reports. "We are united. Our job is to energize our party," McCain told a Salt Lake City audience with Romney at his side. More »

    • Obama Plan: $30B Stimulus, More Regulation

      Obama Plan: $30B Stimulus, More Regulation

      Barack Obama called today for stricter financial regulations and laid out a $30 billion stimulus plan, the Wall Street Journal reports, including measures aimed at the foreclosure crisis. The Democratic candidate said President Bush had “a generally scornful attitude toward oversight and enforcement,” and proposed expanding Fed powers and upping banks’ capital requirements. More »

    • Saint John Still Tainted by Senate Murk

      Saint John Still Tainted by Senate Murk

      With John McCain the presumptive Republican nominee, Democrats are rushing to expose chinks in the Arizona senator's saintly armor, Michael Scherer reports in Time . Though McCain talks tough about special interests, he has often appeared to have done their bidding. He once, for example, wrote a letter on behalf of a donor after a fundraiser on said donor’s yacht. More »

    • Clinton Slips to New Low in Poll

      Clinton Slips to New Low in Poll

      Hillary Clinton is suffering some of the worst poll numbers of her political career, according to an NBC/ Wall Street Journal poll. Clinton chalked up a personal approval rating of just 37%, the lowest since March 2001, two months after her election to the Senate. And of Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain, the poll ranked Hillary the least capable of uniting the nation. More »

    • McCain: US Must Be Tough But Listen to Allies

      McCain: US Must Be Tough But Listen to Allies

      John McCain insisted today in a foreign policy address that the US can't abandon its "moral responsibility in Iraq” but that it must do a better job of working with its allies on the world's trouble spots. He distanced himself at times from Bush, rejecting not only brash unilateralism but the inhumane treatment of prisoners, Politico reports, and he called for closing Guantanamo. “There is such a thing as international good citizenship,” he said. More »

    • 28% of Hillary Fans Would Pick Mac Over Obama

      28% of Hillary Fans Would Pick Mac Over Obama

      In a troubling sign for Democratic odds of overcoming the primary bloodbath, a poll finds 28% of Hillary Clinton supporters say they would vote for John McCain over Barack Obama, and 19% of Barack boosters would go GOP over Clinton. It’s great news for the crossover-friendly Republican, the Chicago Tribune notes—and suggests Dem “divisions are running deep,” says the pollster. More »

    • Experts Deride McCain’s Mortgage Crisis Fix

      Experts Deride McCain&rsquo;s Mortgage Crisis Fix

      Economists, and rivals, are scoffing at John McCain’s ideas for countering the nation’s foreclosure crisis, taking aim at the suggestion that top lenders follow the post-9/11 example of General Motors—which offered 0% financing on new cars. But experts note that GM had its own interests in mind—not the country’s—in selling off excess inventory, the New York Sun reports. More »

    • Brown: World Needs US to Lead

      Brown: World Needs US to Lead

      British PM Gordon Brown plans a landmark speech in Boston next month, calling on the US to once again provide inspiration to a world in need of American "values and leadership." The address will be aimed at John McCain, Hillary Clinton, and Barack Obama—not President Bush, the Daily Telegraph reports. Brown will evoke the memory of presidents such as Kennedy, Truman, and Roosevelt, who he believes were vital to global peace and prosperity. More »

    • Nancy Reagan Endorses McCain

      Nancy Reagan Endorses McCain

      Top Republicans continue to fall in line behind John McCain, despite skepticism about his conservative credentials. The latest to back the candidate is former first lady Nancy Reagan, who met privately with McCain at her southern California home. Her endorsement is an important boost for McCain, linking him to the former president who stands as a GOP icon. More »

    • Candidates' Family Trees Have Far-Flung Limbs

      Candidates' Family Trees Have Far-Flung Limbs

      The Angelina Jolie-Brad Pitt household might have trouble choosing a Democratic candidate: It turns out Barack Obama is a distant cousin of Pitt’s and Hillary Clinton is a relative of Jolie’s. The author of a new genealogical survey cautions voters not to be too swayed—but it seems fitting that John McCain’s sixth cousin is one Laura Bush. More »

    • No 'Reward' For Borrowers, Lenders: McCain

      No 'Reward' For Borrowers, Lenders: McCain

      John McCain said today he opposes government action to bail out homeowners having trouble with their mortgages, the New York Times reports. McCain—who will receive Nancy Reagan's endorsement today—differentiated himself from both Democratic candidates, who have called for federal intervention, saying: “It is not the duty of government to bail out and reward those who act irresponsibly." More »

    • Obama's Foreign Policy Would Be Radical Overhaul

      Obama's Foreign Policy Would Be Radical Overhaul

      Barack Obama provides “the most sweeping liberal foreign-policy critique” from a presidential contender in decades, writes Spencer Ackerman in the American Prospect —focusing not on fear, but rather on what advisers call “dignity promotion.” Ackerman credits the candidate's brain trust with cutting through “Democratic timidity” to look at the root causes of anti-Americanism and address misery on a global basis. More »

    • Will the Losers Rebound, Try Again, or Retire?

      Will the Losers Rebound, Try Again, or Retire?

      Very different futures await the two candidates who don't reach the White House, watchers say, with Barack Obama viewed as a future White House candidate, Hillary Clinton seen as a likely party leader in the Senate, and John McCain expected to retire in 2010. If Hillary doesn’t win, and campaigns hard for Obama, she’ll likely maintain her rep—and the top congressional job may be hers. More »

    • Open-Minded Obama Earns Backing of GOP Stalwart

      Open-Minded Obama Earns Backing of GOP Stalwart

      The former legal counsel to Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush is siding with Barack Obama, calling the Democrat “a person of integrity, intelligence and good will.” Doug Kmiec disagrees with the candidate on gay marriage, abortion, states’ rights, and the place of religion in the public sphere, but he says Obama’s ability to engage opposing viewpoints won him over. More »

    • GOP's Strength Frays at Local Level

      GOP's Strength Frays at Local Level

      Their national candidate needs support, but the Republican Party's state chapters are in no position to lend John McCain a hand, Politico reports. From New York to Alaska, local organizations are rife with dissension, debt, and scandal. "We are clearly rebuilding," says the Michigan GOP chairman. More »

    • Did McCain Almost Switch Sides?

      Did McCain Almost Switch Sides?

      John McCain has been feverishly polishing his conservative credentials lately, but the Republican nominee has twice flirted with crossing the aisle for good, the New York Times points out. In 2001, fresh from a bitter election battle with George W. Bush, he considered switching parties, and in 2004 he talked with John Kerry about sharing a presidential ticket. More »

    • Clinton, McCain Could Pick Up Some Pointers From Obama

      Clinton, McCain Could Pick Up Some Pointers From Obama

      Add conservative columnist—and speechwriter of note—Peggy Noonan to the list of pundits impressed by Barack Obama’s address on race. “It was a speech to think to, not clap to,” Noonan writes in the Wall Street Journal . And it holds a lesson for Clinton and McCain: Say "something interesting"—speak in paragraphs instead of soundbites—and you, too, might get more than an 8-second snippet of your speech on the news. More »

Stories 401 - 420 of 710

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Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks at a town hall meeting, Tuesday, May 8, 2007, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is shown during an interview with an Associated Press reporter in Grand Rapids, Mich., Thursday, May 10, 2007. (AP Photo/Adam Bird)   (Associated Press)
In this photograph provided by "Meet The Press", Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Aria., left, and his mother, Roberta McCain, speak with moderator Tim Russert during a taping of "Meet...   (Associated Press)
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., talks to the media as he arrives for the Republican presidential debate on the campus of The University of South Carolina's Koger Center Tuesday, May 15, 2007, in Columbia,S.C....   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., waves as he take the stage for the Republican debate at University of South Carolina's Koger Center for the Arts, Tuesday, May 15, 2007, in Columbia,...   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopefuls, from left , Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.; former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani; former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee; Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif.; Sen. Sam Brownback...   (Associated Press)
Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks during the Republican Debate at University of South Carolina's Koger Center for the Arts, Tuesday, May 15, 2007, in Columbia, S.C. The...   (Associated Press)
Meghan McCain listens to her father, Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., while speaking at a town hall meeting in Tyler, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/Dr. Scott M....   (AP Photo)
Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., conducts a press conference after speaking at a town hall meeting in Tyler, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/Dr. Scott M. Lieberman)   (AP Photo)
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Ready to Lead   (JohnMcCaindotcom (YouTube))

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Related Threads

Election 2008    Obama 2008    Clinton-Obama Tussle    Clinton 2008    Presumptive Nominee Mac    Romney 2008    Huckabee 2008    A House Divided    Bush 43    Giuliani 2008

Background

Be Afraid of President McCain
Reason Magazine

"The frightening mind of an authoritarian maverick."

» Read more about Be Afraid of President McCain at Reason Magazine

The Coming McCain Moment
JohnMcCain.com

" 'I got some encouraging news this morning in the USA Today,' says Sen. John McCain, holding a copy of the paper with his picture on the front page. 'McCain firm on Iraq war,' it says above the fold. He flips it over to show the rest of the headline: 'despite cost to candidacy.' 'I can't worry about...

» Read more about The Coming McCain Moment at JohnMcCain.com

The Real McCain
Nation

"Over the Senate's August recess, John McCain returned to Arizona to quash a brewing conservative insurgency in his home state. The Arizona Republican Assembly, a grassroots right-wing group, had recently censured McCain for 'ignoring the opinions of his constituents expressed in numerous polls and...

» Read more about The Real McCain at Nation

John McCain on Project Vote Smart
Project Vote Smart

Biography, voting record and interest group ratings.

» Read more about John McCain on Project Vote Smart at Project Vote Smart

John McCain's Congressional Bio
bioguide.congress.gov

McCAIN, John Sidney, III, a Representative and a Senator from Arizona; born in Panama Canal Zone, August 29, 1936; attended schools in Alexandria, Va.; graduated, United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. 1958, and the National War College, Washington, D.C. 1973; pilot, United States Navy 1958-1981,...

» Read more about John McCain's Congressional Bio at bioguide.congress.gov

John Sidney McCain, 3d
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

John Sidney McCain, 3d 1936-, U.S. politician, b. Panama Canal Zone. A much decorated navy veteran, he was born into a career naval family and attended the U.S. Naval Academy, graduating in 1958. He became a pilot and during the Vietnam War was shot down over Hanoi (1967) and captured; he was ...

» Read more about John Sidney McCain, 3d at Encyclopedia.com

John McCain
Wikipedia

John Sidney McCain III (born August 29, 1936) is the senior United States Senator from Arizona and presumptive Republican Party nominee for President of the United States in the upcoming 2008 election.McCain graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1958, and became a naval aviator, flying attack...

» Read more about John McCain at Wikipedia

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