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August 21, 2008 10:08:01 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 701 - 720 of 983

  • March 2008
    • McCain Clinches GOP Nomination

      (Newser) - John McCain officially clinched the Republican nomination for president tonight, CNN reports. McCain racked up easy wins tonight in Texas, Ohio, Vermont, and Rhode Island to secure the necessary number of delegates—1,191. McCain will go to the White House tomorrow to collect an endorsement from President Bush, CNN notes. More »

    • Obama, McCain Win in Vermont

      Obama, McCain Win in Vermont

      (Newser) - Barack Obama and John McCain won their primaries in Vermont tonight, the Burlington Free Press reports. For Obama, it's his 12th straight political victory over Hillary Clinton, though the bigger focus comes later tonight when voters in Ohio and Texas weigh in. Rhode Island also votes. McCain, meanwhile, edges closer to officially securing the GOP nomination, which he could do tonight. More »

    • Which Hopeful Is Greenest?

      Which Hopeful Is Greenest?

      (Newser) - Primary voters who lean green can go with "visionary" Barack Obama or policy whiz Hillary Clinton, writes Brendan I. Koerner in Slate—both are good. Each offers a cap-and-trade system to cut carbon to 80% below 1990 levels by 2050, and both want to make 25% of energy renewable by 2025. "Neither is perfect, given their knee-jerk affinity for biofuels and clean coal, but such is the nature of politics," Koerner writes. More »

    • Traders Bet On McCain vs. Obama

      Traders Bet On McCain vs. Obama

      (Newser) - Traders in online prediction markets are betting on Barack Obama and John McCain as the winners in their respective primaries today. The Intrade and Iowa Electronic futures markets let traders wager real money on outcomes political and otherwise; both markets give Obama's chances for winning the nomination as almost 80%, reports CNNMoney. More »

    • Steinem on McCain's Vietnam Years: So What?

      Steinem on McCain's Vietnam Years: So What?

      (Newser) - Uber feminist Gloria Steinem downplayed John McCain's experience as a Vietnam POW in a stump speech for Hillary Clinton, and said Americans have behaved since George Washington "as if killing people is a qualification for ruling people," reports the New York Observer . Speaking of McCain's years as a POW, Steinem told a Texas audience: "I mean, hello? This is supposed to be a qualification to be president? I don’t think so." More »

    • Ohio, Texas Torn Over Iraq

      Ohio, Texas Torn Over Iraq

      (Newser) - Tomorrow's most delegate-rich primary states, Ohio and Texas, are key to the US war effort and staunchly support the troops—but remain divided over whether to stay or quit a conflict that has cost 4,000 US lives and $500 billion. And between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton on the one hand, and John McCain on the other, they are offered a stark choice of fight or flight. More »

    • Only Obama Can Rescue US 'Brand'

      Only Obama Can Rescue US 'Brand'

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton is the sturdy candidate resembling Microsoft, John McCain evokes Hummer, and Mike Huckabee’s the Applebee’s of the field, but only Barack Obama "has the secret sauce that Brand America needs to regain its appeal." media consultant Jeff Yang writes in Salon. Yang is part of a team studying the "brand's" international standing, and he shares some insights. More »

    • McCain Outlines More Specific Fiscal Stance

      McCain Outlines More Specific Fiscal Stance

      (Newser) - How would John McCain run the economy, really? In an interview with the Wall Street Journal , the candidate tried to answer that question, positioning himself as a fiscally responsible defender of the Bush tax cuts. But the candidate’s tax proposals don’t quite add up, the Journal notes, and he contradicted his own website’s statements on Social Security. More »

    • 'SNL' Regains Its Political Mojo

      'SNL' Regains Its Political Mojo

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton's appearance on "Saturday Night Live" confirms not just that the show is back from the writers' strike, writes Matt Roush in TV Guide, but back "smack dab in the center of today’s political dialogue." The sight of Clinton and identically dressed alter ego Amy Poehler onstage was "an image no one will soon forget." More »

    • Party Pooh-bahs to Clinton: Lose and Go Home

      Party Pooh-bahs to Clinton: Lose and Go Home

      (Newser) - Top Democrats are urging Hillary Clinton to quit if she can’t score big in Tuesday’s primaries, the New York Times reports. Senators John Kerry and Dick Durbin, both Obama backers, and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson pressed her today to consider party unity if she loses in Texas and Ohio. “I just think that D-Day is Tuesday,” Richardson said on “Face the Nation." More »

    • Dallas Morning News Endorses Huckabee

      Dallas Morning News Endorses Huckabee

      (Newser) - While acknowledging success for Mike Huckabee is "mathematically impossible," the Dallas Morning News today endorsed the ex-Arkansas governor. The editorial board praised his “good-natured approach to politics” and acknowledged that its continuing support is more symbolic than practical, calling a vote for Huckabee “a good investment in the Republican Party's future.” More »

    • Elections Put US-Russia Ties in Limbo

      Elections Put US-Russia Ties in Limbo

      (Newser) - As Russians vote today, the Washington Post looks at factors that have chilled Russia-US relations in recent months—from a stalled nuclear pact to Kosovo to a proposed missile defense system in Eastern Europe. President Bush is trying to smooth relations by downplaying President Vladimir Putin's power grabs, but analysts say the countries will likely keep cool until both have new presidents. More »

    • Dem Donations a Nightmare for GOP

      Dem Donations a Nightmare for GOP

      (Newser) - Republicans may be enjoying the death match between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, but likely not the phenomenal fundraising of the Democrats.  "I look at the Barack Obama campaign in some horror," the GOP national treasurer tells AP, citing Obama's $50-million take in February, along with Clinton's $35 million—together seven times that of John McCain. More »

  • February 2008
    • What Obama Promises, McCain Delivers

      What Obama Promises, McCain Delivers

      (Newser) - The international press corps is so seduced by Barack Obama and so disgusted by John McCain that neither man can live up to his reputation, London Times US editor Gerard Baker writes. The “grown men wandering the corridors of London, Brussels and Berlin, crooning” about Obama are the same pundits painting McCain as "the grumpy old white man," Baker contends More »

    • Hot Sites Take Voters for a Ride

      Hot Sites Take Voters for a Ride

      (Newser) - Barackobamaisyournewbicycle.com is the latest internet fad: a simple web page that displays a seemingly inexhaustible supply of (likely fictitious) good deeds Barack Obama did for you. He "added you as a friend," "built you a robot," and "made you a mixtape," to start. But what, the Boston Phoenix asks, is the intent behind the site? A pro-Obama-mania celebration? A criticism of the candidate’s ethereal promises? More »

    • Obama Up by 6 in Texas, Down by 2 in Ohio

      Obama Up by 6 in Texas, Down by 2 in Ohio

      (Newser) - Ahead of Tuesday’s crucial primaries, Barack Obama leads Hillary Clinton in Texas, 48% to 42%, and trails in Ohio, 44% to 42%, Reuters reports. “All the momentum is with Obama,” said pollster John Zogby. “The question is whether she can stem the tide.” In Ohio, Clinton retains strong leads among women, older voters, Democrats, Catholics, and union members. More »

    • McCain, Born in Canal Zone, Dismisses Citizenship Flap

      McCain, Born in Canal Zone, Dismisses Citizenship Flap

      (Newser) - A recent media flap about John McCain's citizenship is a non-issue, the candidate says. McCain was born in the Panama Canal Zone while his father served there in the Navy, which makes him a natural-born citizen and qualifies him to run for president, the AP reports. His camp recently sought a legal analysis on the matter, and a New York Times article got pundits speculating. More »

    • Obama Rakes in $50M, Clinton $35M in February

      Obama Rakes in $50M, Clinton $35M in February

      (Newser) - Barack Obama's campaign will have raised roughly $50 million by the time February ends, the New York Times reports. The record figure overshadows Hillary Clinton's tally of about $35 million for the month, her highest total yet. "It's an extraordinary number for us," said Clinton's campaign chief. The Obama camp hasn't released official figures, but major donors familiar with the tally provided an estimate. More »

    • Will Mac Reject His Radical Pastor's Nod?

      Will Mac Reject His Radical Pastor's Nod?

      (Newser) - Barack Obama gets grilled over unsolicited praise from Louis Farrakhan, but John McCain draws no flak for “proudly” accepting the endorsement of a homophobic, Islamophobic evangelical pastor. Grotesque double standard, Glenn Greenwald calls it in Salon. Tim Russert made Obama “jump through multiple hoops” to disown the Nation of Islam leader, but no one’s complaining that Mac’s “honored” to be John Hagee’s choice, he notes. More »

    • McCain, Obama Left No Place for Bloomberg

      McCain, Obama Left No Place for Bloomberg

      (Newser) - If Rudy and Hillary were the frontrunners, Michael Bloomberg wouldn't have ruled out an independent bid for the presidency, as he did today, writes Jon Meacham of Newsweek .  But John McCain and Barack Obama, the putative nominees, have a lock on the “novelty narrative,” so the billionaire mayor—who's been successively a Democrat, then Republican, then independent—made “the wise business decision to save his money.” More »

Stories 701 - 720 of 983

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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Related Threads

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

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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