I enjoyed reading Senator John McCain’s book during the 2000 election cycle, about his service in the military and time in a Vietnam prisoner of war camp. He seemed to be a real hero. I also recall fondly bumping into him occasionally at the "social Safeway" in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia when my wife and I worked in the Reagan Administration. I specifically recall one instance where he was closely observing a Romaine Lettuce and I approached him to say he was getting a raw deal on the "Keating Five" scandal in the media. The next time I met him was at a private meeting with the Board of Directors of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association in Los Angeles, that Mrs. Jarvis attended. We talked about his presidential ambitions but I voiced a small concern about his idea on campaign finance reform. He didn’t have much of an answer when I asked about implications to the First Amendment.
Today Cindy McCain is reported to have appeared in a television advertisement in support of gay marriage. This report comes on the same day that the U.S. Supreme Court, in yet another decision, has further clobbered the so-called "McCain-Feingold" campaign finance reform package on First Amendment grounds. The very same measure I contritely mentioned in a meeting with him at the HJTA Los Angeles offices about 10 years ago. "McCain-Feingold" was a terrible affront to the First Amendment to our Constitution, and it is all but dead now. As I look back on it, I think McCain supported it, basically to wash away his sins in the "Keating Five" scandal.
John McCain was a good Congressman. Ronald Reagan supported him. But Nancy didn’t like him leaving his wife for Cindy, and that development started a trail of guffaws. The McCain-Feingold bill was awful. The Keating Five scandal was awful. His campaign for President in 2008 was awful. And Cindy’s advertisement for gay marriage is awful. I think John McCain has become a terrible waste of effort for Republican volunteers. I look forward to new leadership.
January 22nd, 2010 at 12:00 am
Watch out here comes Jill!
January 22nd, 2010 at 12:00 am
Sorry part of it is, McCain is considered a “conservative” in some circles.