John McCain
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John Sidney McCain III (born August 29, 1936) is the senior United States Senator from Arizona and a candidate for the Republican Party nomination in the 2008 presidential election.
Born in the Panama Canal Zone, both McCain's grandfather and father were Admirals in the United States Navy. Rebellious as a youth, McCain too attended the United States Naval Academy, but finished near the bottom of his graduating class in 1958. McCain became a naval aviator flying attack aircraft from carriers. Participating in the Vietnam War, he narrowly escaped death during the 1967 Forrestal fire. On his twenty-third bombing mission over North Vietnam later in 1967, he was shot down and badly injured. He became a prisoner of war. He endured five and a half years of captivity, including periods of torture, before he was released following the Paris Peace Accords in 1973.
Retiring from the Navy in 1981 and moving to Arizona, McCain soon entered politics. In 1982 he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona's 1st congressional district. After serving two terms there, he was elected to the U.S. Senate from Arizona in 1986. He was subsequently re-elected Senator in 1992, 1998, and 2004. While generally an adherent to American conservatism, McCain established a reputation as a political maverick for his willingness to defy Republican orthodoxy on several issues. Surviving the Keating Five scandal of the 1980s, he made campaign finance reform one of his signature concerns, which eventually led to the passing of the McCain-Feingold Act in 2002.
McCain was a candidate in the 2000 presidential election, but was defeated by George W. Bush for the Republican nomination after closely contested battles in several early primary states. In the 2008 presidential election, he was the nominal front-runner as the cycle began, but suffered a near collapse of his campaign in mid-2007 due to financial issues and his support for comprehensive immigration reform. He is attempting a comeback as the 2008 primaries begin.
Contents |
Early life and military career
Family background and early education
McCain was born on August 29, 1936 in Panama at the Coco Solo Air Base in the then American-controlled Panama Canal Zone[1] to Admiral John S. "Jack" McCain, Jr. and Roberta (Wright) McCain. Both his father and grandfather were United States Navy admirals, and were in fact the first father-son pair to both achieve four-star admiral rank.[2] His grandfather John S. "Slew" McCain, Sr. was a pioneer of aircraft carrier strategy[3] who commanded all carrier forces in the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II, led American forces into epic actions such as the Battle of Leyte Gulf, and died four days after the conclusion of the war.[2] His father was a submarine commander during World War II[2] who won medals for heroism.[3]
For the first ten years of his life, McCain was frequently uprooted as his family followed his father to New London, Connecticut, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and various other stations in the Pacific Ocean; McCain attended whatever naval base school was available, often to the detriment to his education.[4] After the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, his father was absent for long stretches.[3] As a child, John was known for a quick temper and an aggressive drive to compete and prevail.[4] After World War II was over, his father stayed in the Navy, sometimes working political liaison posts;[3] the family settled in Northern Virginia, and McCain attended the educationally stronger St. Stephen's School in Alexandria, Virginia from 1946 to 1949.[5] Another two years was then spent following his father around to naval stations;[6] altogether he would go to about twenty different schools during his youth.[7] He then attended Episcopal High School in Alexandria beginning in 1951; it is a top private school with a rigorous honor code.[8] McCain earned two varsity letters in wrestling,[9] where he excelled in the lighter weight classes.[2] He had a continued reputation as a fiery and contentious personality[9] and graduated from high school in 1954.
Naval training, early assignments, marriage and family
Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, McCain entered the United States Naval Academy. McCain was a rebellious midshipman and his career at the Naval Academy was ambivalent and lackluster.[10] He had his share of run-ins with the faculty and leadership; each year he was given over 100 demerits (for unshined shoes, formation faults, talking out of place, and the like),[10] earning him membership in the "Century Club".[2] He did not take well to those of higher rank arbitrarily wielding power of him — "It was bullshit, and I resented the hell out of it"[10] — and would sometimes intervene when he saw it being done to others.[2] At 5 foot 7 inches[11] and 127 pounds[12] (1.70 m and 58 kg), he competed as a lightweight boxer for three years, where he lacked skills but was fearless and "didn't have a reverse gear."[12] He did well in a few subjects that he was interested in, such as English literature, history and government.[2][10] Despite his low standing, he was a leader among his fellow midshipmen,[10] especially in organizing off-Yard activities; one classmate said that "being on liberty with John McCain was like being in a train wreck."[10] Despite his difficulties, he later wrote that he never wavered in his desire to show his father and family that he was of the same mettle as his naval forbears. Dropping out was unthinkable and so he successfully completed his training and graduated from Annapolis in 1958; he was fifth from the bottom in class rank.[13]
Upon his graduation McCain was commissioned an ensign, and spent two and a half years as a naval aviator in training at Naval Air Station Pensacola in Florida and Naval Air Station Corpus Christi in Texas,[14] flying A-1 Skyraiders.[15] He earned a reputation as a party man, as he drove a Corvette, dated an exotic dancer named "Marie the Flame of Florida", and, as he would later say, "generally misused my good health and youth."[7] During a practice run in Corpus Christi, his aircraft crashed into Corpus Christi Bay, though he escaped without major injuries;[14] another time he emerged intact from a collision with power lines over Spain.[2] He was graduated from flight school in 1960[16] and became a naval pilot of attack aircraft.
McCain was stationed on the aircraft carriers USS Intrepid and USS Enterprise,[17] in the Caribbean Sea. He was on alert duty on Enterprise when it imposed a blockade and quarantine of Cuba during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.[18][16] He then returned to Pensacola station, where he served as a flight instructor at Naval Air Station Meridian in Mississippi, whose McCain Field was named for his grandfather.[17] By 1964 he was in a relationship with Carol Shepp, a model originally from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; they had known each other at Annapolis and she had married one of his classmates, but then divorced.[14][17] On July 3, 1965, McCain married Shepp in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[13] McCain adopted her two children Doug and Andy,[19] who were five and three years old at the time;[17] he and Carol then had a daughter named Sydney on September 2, 1966.[17][13]
McCain grew frustrated with his training role and requested a combat assignment.[15] In December 1966 McCain was assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal, flying A-4 Skyhawks; his service there began with tours in the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean.[20] In May 1967 his father was promoted to four-star admiral and made Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Naval Forces, Europe, stationed in London.[3]
Vietnam operations
| John Sidney McCain III | |
|---|---|
| August 29, 1936 – present | |
| Allegiance | United States Navy (Naval aviation) |
| Years of service | 1958–1981 |
| Rank | Captain |
| Unit | USS Forrestal (CV-59) |
| Battles/wars | Vietnam |
| Awards | Silver Star Legion of Merit Distinguished Flying Cross Bronze Star Purple Heart |
| Other work | Naval liaison to the United States Senate, United States Senator from Arizona, Presidential candidate |
In Spring 1967 Forrestal was assigned to join Operation Rolling Thunder, the bombing campaign against North Vietnam as part of the Vietnam War.[13][21] The alpha strikes flown from Forrestal were against specific, pre-selected infrastructure targets such as arms depots, factories, and bridges;[22] they were quite dangerous due to the Soviet-designed and supplied anti-aircraft system fielded by the North Vietnamese Air Defense Force.[22] McCain's first five attack missions over North Vietnam went without incident,[15] and while still unconcerned with minor Navy regulations, McCain had by now garnered the reputation of a serious aviator.[18] But McCain and his fellow pilots were already frustrated by Rolling Thunder's infamous micromanagement from Washington;[22] he would later write that "The target list was so restricted that we had to go back and hit the same targets over and over again.... Most of our pilots flying the missions believed that our targets were virtually worthless. In all candor, we thought our civilian commanders were complete idiots who didn’t have the least notion of what it took to win the war."[21]
By now a Lieutenant Commander, McCain was again almost killed in action on July 29, 1967 while serving on the Forrestal, operating at Yankee Station in the Gulf of Tonkin. The crew was preparing to launch attacks when a Zuni rocket from an F-4 Phantom was accidentally fired across the carrier's deck. The rocket struck McCain's A-4E Skyhawk as the jet was preparing for launch.[23][24] The impact ruptured the Skyhawk's fuel tank, which ignited the fuel and knocked two bombs loose. McCain escaped from his jet by climbing out of the cockpit, working himself to the nose of the jet, and jumping off its refueling probe onto the burning deck of the aircraft carrier. Ninety seconds after the impact, one of the bombs exploded underneath his airplane. McCain was struck in the legs and chest by shrapnel. The ensuing fire killed 132 sailors, injured 62 others, destroyed at least 20 aircraft, and took 24 hours to control. (This incident, with flight deck video, is still used in U.S. Navy Recruit Training damage control classes;[15] the video has been made available by McCain's Presidential Exploratory Committee.[25]) A day or two after the Forrestal incident, McCain told New York Times reporter R. W. Apple, Jr. in Saigon that, "It's a difficult thing to say. But now that I've seen what the bombs and the napalm did to the people on our ship, I'm not so sure that I want to drop any more of that stuff on North Vietnam."[26] But a change of course was unlikely, as McCain said, "I always wanted to be in the Navy. I was born into it and I never really considered another profession. But I always had trouble with the regimentation."[26]
As Forrestal headed for repairs, McCain volunteered to join the VA-163 Saints on board the short-staffed USS Oriskany. (Before McCain's arrival, on October 26, 1966, a mishandled flare caused a deck fire, resulting in the deaths of 44 crew, including 24 pilots, and the Oriskany underwent significant repairs; the ship's squadrons also suffered heavy losses during Rolling Thunder, with one-third of their pilots killed or captured during 1967.[15]) By late October 1967, McCain had flown a total of 22 bombing missions.[27]
Prisoner of war
On October 26, 1967, McCain was flying as part of a 20-plane attack against a thermal power plant in central Hanoi, a heavily defended target area that had previously been off-limits to U.S. raids.[29][30] McCain's A-4 Skyhawk was shot down during its approach run by a Soviet-made SA-2 anti-aircraft missile.[30] McCain fractured both arms and a leg in being hit and ejecting from his plane. [31] He nearly drowned after he parachuted into Truc Bach Lake in Hanoi.[29] After he regained consciousness, a mob gathered around him, spat on him, kicked him and stripped him of his clothing.[32] Others crushed his shoulder with the butt of a rifle and bayoneted him in his left foot and abdominal area; he was then transported to Hanoi's main prison.[32] Although badly wounded, his captors refused to put him in the hospital, deciding he would soon die anyway; they beat and interrogated him, but McCain only offered his name, rank, serial number, and date of birth.[32] Only when the North Vietnamese discovered that his father was a top admiral did they give him medical care[32] and announce his capture; at this point, two days after it went down, McCain's plane going missing and his subsequent appearance as a POW made the front page of The New York Times.[26]
McCain spent six weeks in a hospital, receiving marginal care, was interviewed by a French television reporter whose report was carried on CBS, and was observed by a variety of North Vietnamese, including the famous General Vo Nguyen Giap, many of whom assumed that he must be part of America's political-military-economic elite.[32] Now having lost 50 pounds, in a chest cast, and with his hair turned white,[29] McCain was sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in Hanoi in December 1967, into a cell with two other Americans who did not expect him to live a week (one was Bud Day, a future Medal of Honor recipient); they nursed McCain and kept him alive.[33] In March 1968, McCain was put into solitary confinement, where he would be for two years.[32] In July 1968, McCain's father was named Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Command (CINCPAC), stationed in Honolulu and commander of all U.S. forces in the Vietnam theater.[3] McCain was immediately offered a chance to return home early:[29] the North Vietnamese wanted a mercy-showing propaganda coup for the outside world, and a message that only privilege mattered that they could use against the other POWs.[32] McCain turned down the offer of repatriation due to the Code of Conduct of "first in, first out": he would only accept the offer if every man taken in before him was released as well.[34] McCain's refusal to be released was even remarked upon by North Vietnamese officials to U.S. envoy Averell Harriman at the ongoing Paris Peace Talks.[29]
In August 1968, a program of vigorous torture methods began on McCain, using rope bindings into painful positions and beatings every two hours, at the same time as he was suffering from dysentery.[32][29] Teeth and bones were broken again as was McCain's spirit; the beginnings of a suicide attempt was stopped by guards.[29] After four days of this, McCain signed an anti-American propaganda "confession" that said he was a "black criminal" and an "air pirate",[29] although he used stilted Communist jargon and ungrammatical language to signal the statement was forced.[35] He would later write, "I had learned what we all learned over there: Every man has his breaking point. I had reached mine."[32] His injuries to this day have left him incapable of raising his arms above his head.[36] His captors tried to force him to sign a second statement, and this time he refused. He received two to three beatings per week because of his continued refusal.[37] (Other American POWs were similarly tortured and maltreated in order to extract "confessions".[32]) On one occasion when McCain was physically coerced to give the names of members of his squadron, he supplied them the names of the Green Bay Packers' offensive line.[35] McCain refused to meet with various anti-war peace groups coming to Hanoi, such as those led by David Dellinger, Tom Hayden, and Rennie Davis, not wanting to give either them or the North Vietnamese a propaganda victory based on his connection to his father.[32]
In October 1969, treatment of McCain and the other POWs suddenly improved, after a badly beaten and weakened POW who had been released that summer disclosed to the world press the conditions to which they were being subjected.[32] In December 1969, McCain was transferred to Hoa Loa Prison, which later became famous via its POW nickname of the "Hanoi Hilton".[32] McCain continued to refuse to see anti-war groups or journalists sympathetic to the North Vietnamese regime;[32] to one visitor who did speak with him, McCain later wrote, "I told him I had no remorse about what I did, and that I would do it over again if the same opportunity presented itself."[32] McCain and other prisoners were moved around to different camps at times, but conditions over the next several years were generally more tolerable than they had been before.[32]
Altogether McCain was held as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam for five and a half years. The Paris Peace Accords were signed on January 27, 1973, ending direct U.S. involvement in the war, but arrangements for POWs took longer; McCain was finally released from captivity on March 15, 1973,[38] having been a POW for almost an extra five years due to his refusal to accept the out-of-sequence repatriation offer.[39]
Return to United States
Upon his return to the United States, McCain was reunited with his wife Carol, who had suffered her own crippling, near-death ordeal during his captivity, due to an automobile accident in December 1969 that left her facing months of operations and physical therapy;[40] by the time he saw her again she was four inches shorter, on crutches, and substantially heavier.[41] As a returned POW, McCain became a celebrity of sorts: The New York Times ran a photo of him getting off the plane at Clark Air Base in the Philippines; he published a long cover story describing his ordeal and his support for the Nixon administration's handling of the war in U.S. News & World Report; he participated in several parades and personal appearances; and a photograph of him on crutches shaking the hand of President Richard Nixon at a White House reception for returning POWs became iconic.[40]
McCain underwent treatment for his injuries, and attended the National War College in Fort McNair in Washington, D.C. during 1973–1974.[40][16] Few thought McCain could fly again, but he was determined to try, and engaged in nine months of grueling, painful physical therapy, especially to get his knees to bend again.[41] By late 1974 McCain had recuperated just enough to pass his flight physical[41] and have his flight status reinstated,[40] and he became Executive Officer and then Commanding Officer of the VA-174 Hellrazors, the East Coast A-7 Corsair II Navy training squadron stationed at Naval Air Station Cecil Field outside Jacksonville in Florida and the largest attack squadron in the Navy.[40][16][42] McCain's leadership abilities were credited with turning around a mediocre unit, improving its aircraft readiness and pilot safety metrics and winning the squadron its first Meritorious Unit Commendation,[41] and while some senior officers resented McCain's presence as favoritism due to his father, junior officers rallied to him and helped him qualify for A-7 carrier landings.[41]
During the time in Jacksonville, the McCains' marriage began to falter.[43] McCain had extramarital affairs,[43] and he would later say, "My marriage's collapse was attributable to my own selfishness and immaturity more than it was to Vietnam, and I cannot escape blame by pointing a finger at the war. The blame was entirely mine."[43] His wife Carol would later echo those sentiments, saying "I attribute [the breakup of our marriage] more to John turning 40 and wanting to be 25 again than I do to anything else."[43]
Senate liaison and second marriage
In 1976, McCain briefly thought of running for the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida.[44] Instead, based upon the recommendation of Admiral James L. Holloway III,[40] in 1977 McCain became the Navy's liaison to the U.S. Senate.[44] Returning to the Washington, D.C. area, McCain soon became the leader of the Russell Senate Office Building liaison operation, and would later say it represented "[my] real entry into the world of politics and the beginning of my second career as a public servant."[40] McCain was influenced by senators of both parties, and especially by a strong bond with Republican Senator John Tower, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.[40]
In 1979, while attending a military reception in Hawaii, McCain met and fell in love with Cindy Lou Hensley, 17 years his junior, a teacher from Phoenix, Arizona who was the daughter of James Willis Hensley, a wealthy Anheuser-Busch distributor and wife Marguerite Smith.[43] By now it was clear that McCain's naval career was stalled; he would never be promoted to admiral as his grandfather and father had been.[41]. McCain filed for and obtained an uncontested divorce from his wife Carol in Florida on April 2, 1980;[19] he gave her a generous settlement, including houses in Virginia and Florida and financial support for her ongoing medical treatments, and they would remain on good terms.[43] McCain and Hensley were married on May 17, 1980[13] in Phoenix, Arizona, with Senators William Cohen and Gary Hart as best man and groomsman.[43]
McCain retired from the Navy in 1981 as a Captain.[11] During his military career, he received a Silver Star, a Bronze Star, the Legion of Merit, the Purple Heart, and a Distinguished Flying Cross.[45] McCain is one of five veterans from the Vietnam War currently serving in the United States Senate; the others are Thomas Carper (D-DE), Chuck Hagel (R-NE), John Kerry (D-MA) and Jim Webb (D-VA).[46] A television film entitled Faith Of My Fathers, based on McCain's memoir of his experiences as a POW, aired on Memorial Day, 2005, on A&E.[47]
Political career
U.S. Congressman
Now living in Phoenix, McCain went to work for his new father-in-law Jim Hensley's large Anheuser-Busch beer distributorship as Vice President of Public Relations,[43] where he gained political support among the local business community,[44] meeting powerful figures such as banker Charles Keating, Jr., real estate developer Fife Symington III,[43], and newspaper publisher Darrow "Duke" Tully,[44] all the while looking for an electoral opportunity.[43] When John Jacob Rhodes, Jr., the longtime Republican congressman from Arizona's 1st congressional district, announced his retirement, McCain ran for the seat as a Republican in 1982.[48] McCain faced two experienced state legislators in the Republican nomination process, and as a newcomer to the state was hit with repeated charges of being a carpetbagger.[43] Finally at a candidates forum he gave a famous refutation to a voter making the charge:
| “ | Listen, pal. I spent 22 years in the Navy. My grandfather was in the Navy. We in the military service tend to move a lot. We have to live in all parts of the country, all parts of the world. I wish I could have had the luxury, like you, of growing up and living and spending my entire life in a nice place like the first district of Arizona, but I was doing other things. As a matter of fact, when I think about it now, the place I lived longest in my life was Hanoi.[43] | ” |
A Phoenix Gazette columnist would later label this "the most devastating response to a potentially troublesome political issue I've ever heard."[43] With the assistance of some local political endorsements and his Washington connections, as well as effective television advertising, partly financed by $167,000 that his wife lent to his campaign (which helped him outspend his opponents),[44] and with support of Tully's The Arizona Republic (the state's most powerful newspaper),[44] McCain won the highly contested primary election in September 1982.[43] By comparison, the general election two months later became an easy lopsided victory for him in the heavily Republican district.[43]
McCain made an immediate impression in Congress. He was elected the president of the 1983 Republican freshman class of representatives.[43] He was assigned to the Committee on Interior Affairs, the Select Committee on Aging, and eventually to the chairmanship of the Republican Task Force on Indian Affairs.[49] He sponsored a number of Indian Affairs bills, dealing mainly with giving distribution of lands to reservations and tribal tax status; most of these bills were unsuccessful.[50] McCain’s politics at this point were mainly in line with President Ronald Reagan, from issues ranging from the economy to the Soviet Union.[51] However, his vote against a resolution allowing President Reagan to keep U.S. Marines deployed as part of the Multinational Force in Lebanon, on the grounds that he "[did] not foresee obtainable objectives in Lebanon," would seem prescient after the catastrophic Beirut barracks bombing a month later;[43] this vote would also start his national media reputation as a political maverick.[43] McCain won re-election to the House easily in 1984.[43] In the new term McCain got the Indian Economic Development Act of 1985 signed into law.[52] In 1985 he returned to Vietnam with Walter Cronkite for a CBS News special, and saw the monument put up next to where the famous downed "air pirate Ma Can" had been pulled from the Hanoi lake;[53] it was the first of several return trips McCain would make there.[53] In 1986 he broke ranks again in voting to successfully override Reagan's veto of the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act that imposed sanctions against South Africa.[54]
In 1984 McCain and his wife Cindy had their first child together, daughter Meghan. She was followed in 1986 by son John Sidney IV (known as "Jack"), and in 1988 by son James.[55] In 1993, the couple adopted a baby daughter, Bridget, who needed medical treatment for a cleft palate, from a Bangladeshi orphanage run by Mother Teresa.[56] Beginning in the early 1990s he began attending the 6,000-member North Phoenix Baptist Church in Arizona, part of the Southern Baptist Convention, later saying "[I found] the message and fundamental nature more fulfilling than I did in the Episcopal church. ... They're great believers in redemption, and so am I."[57] Nevertheless he still identified himself as Episcopalian,[57] and while Cindy and two of their children were baptized, he was not.[57]
U.S. Senator
McCain decided to run for United States Senator from Arizona in 1986, when longtime American conservative icon and Arizona fixture Barry Goldwater retired.[58] No Republican would oppose McCain in the primary, and as described by his press secretary Torie Clarke, McCain's political strength convinced his most formidable possible Democratic opponent, Governor Bruce Babbitt, not to run for the senate seat.[58] Instead McCain faced a weaker opponent, former state legislator Richard Kimball, a young politician with an offbeat personality who slept on his office floor[59] and whom McCain's allies in the Arizona press characterized as having "terminal weirdness."[58] McCain's associations with Duke Tully, who by now had been disgraced for having concocted a ficticious military record, as well as relevations of father-in-law Jim Hensley's past brushes with the law, became campaign issues, but in the end McCain won the election easily with 60 percent of the vote.[58][44]
Upon entering the Senate in 1987, McCain became a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, with whom he had formerly done his Navy liaison work; he also joined the Commerce Committee and the Indian Affairs Committee.[58] McCain soon gained national visibility, delivering an emotional, impassioned speech about his time as a POW at the 1988 Republican National Convention[60] being mentioned by the press as a short list vice-presidential running mate for Republican nominee George H. W. Bush,[60][58] and being named chairman of Veterans for Bush.[61] In 1989, he became a staunch defender of his friend John Tower's doomed nomination for U.S. Secretary of Defense; McCain butted heads with Moral Majority co-founder Paul Weyrich — who was challenging Tower regarding alleged heavy drinking and extramarital affairs[58] — and this began McCain's difficult relationship with the Christian right, as he would later write that Weyrich was "a pompous self-serving son of a bitch."[58]
Keating Five
McCain's upwards political trajectory was jolted when he became enmeshed in the Keating Five scandal of the 1980s. In the context of the Savings and Loan crisis of that decade, Charles Keating, Jr.'s Lincoln Savings and Loan Association, a subsidiary of his American Continental Corporation, was insolvent due to some bad loans. In order to regain solvency, Lincoln sold investment in a real estate venture as a FDIC insured savings account. This caught the eye of federal regulators who were looking to shut it down. It is alleged that Keating contacted five senators to whom he made contributions. McCain was one of those senators and he met at least twice in 1987 with Ed Gray, chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, seeking to prevent the government's seizure of Lincoln. Between 1982 and 1987, McCain received approximately $112,000 in political contributions from Keating and his associates.[62] In addition, McCain's wife and her father had invested $359,100 in a Keating shopping center in April 1986, a year before McCain met with the regulators. McCain, his family and baby-sitter made at least nine trips at Keating's expense, sometimes aboard the American Continental jet. After learning Keating was in trouble over Lincoln, McCain paid for the air trips totaling $13,433.[63]
Eventually the real estate venture failed, leaving many broke. Federal regulators ultimately filed a $1.1 billion civil racketeering and fraud suit against Keating, accusing him of siphoning Lincoln's deposits to his family and into political campaigns. The five senators came under investigation for attempting to influence the regulators. In the end, none of the senators were convicted of any crime, but McCain did receive a rebuke from the Senate Ethics Committee for exercising "poor judgment" for intervening with the federal regulators on behalf of Keating.[64] On his Keating Five experience, McCain said: "The appearance of it was wrong. It's a wrong appearance when a group of senators appear in a meeting with a group of regulators, because it conveys the impression of undue and improper influence. And it was the wrong thing to do."[64]
McCain survived the political scandal by, in part, becoming very friendly with the political press; [65] with his blunt manner, he became a frequent guest on television news shows, especially once the 1991 Gulf War began and his military and POW experience became in demand.[65] McCain began campaigning against lobbyist money in politics from then on. His 1992 re-election campaign found his opposition split between Democratic community activist Claire Sargent and impeached and removed former Governor Evan Mecham running as in independent; McCain again won handily.[65]
A maverick senator
McCain also branched out and worked with Democratic senators. He was a member of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs. McCain worked with fellow Vietnam War veteran John Kerry to investigate the issue. Due to a lack of recorded evidence, they asked former President Nixon to testify, but after Nixon showed that he was unwilling to do so, Kerry decided not to call Nixon. The committee was finally allowed to look for POWs and MIA in Vietnam in 1995. They never found any POWs or MIA, but these actions allowed for improved ties between the countries and in 1995 President Bill Clinton formally recognized the county of Vietnam as a result of a piece of legislation authored by McCain and Kerry.
Having only barely survived the Keating Five scandal, McCain made attacking the corrupting influence of big money on American politics his signature issue.[54] In 1994 he worked with Democratic Wisconsin Senator Russell Feingold on this first far-reaching campaign finance law, the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (or as commonly known, "McCain-Feingold"). It was first taken to the floor of the Senate in 1995, but it was filibustered. It was repeatedly brought to the floor, until it finally was brought to vote in the House and Senate in 2001 and signed into law in 2002. From the start, McCain and Feingold's efforts garnered sympathetic coverage in the national media, and from 1995 on, "maverick Republican" became a label frequently applied to McCain in stories.[54]
McCain also attacked pork barrel spending within Congress, believing that the practice did not contribute to the greater national interest.[54] Towards this end he was instrumental in pushing through approval of the Line Item Veto Act of 1996,[54] which gave the president the power to veto individual items of pork. Although this was one of McCain's biggest Senate victories,[54] the effect was short-lived as the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the act unconstitutional in 1998.[66] In a more symbolic attempt to limit congressional privilege, he introduced an amendment in 1994 to remove free VIP parking for members of Congress at D.C. area airports; his annoyed colleagues rejected the notion and accused McCain of grandstanding.[54]
McCain was one of only four Republicans in Congress to vote against the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act in 1995, and was the only Republican senator to vote against the Freedom to Farm Act in 1996[citation needed]. He was one of only five senators to vote against the Telecommunications Act of 1996, slamming it as "the biggest rip off since the Teapot Dome scandal."
At the start of the 1996 presidential election, McCain served as national campaign chairman for the highly unsuccessful Republican nomination effort of Texas Senator Phil Gramm.[67] After Gramm dropped out, McCain endorsed eventual nominee Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole,[67] and was again on the short list of possible vice-presidential picks.[68][65] McCain formed a close bond with Dole, based in part on their shared near-death war experiences;[68] he nominated Dole at the 1996 Republican National Convention and was a key friend and advisor to Dole throughout his ultimately losing general election campaign.[68]
In 1997, McCain became chairman of the powerful Senate Commerce Committee; he was criticized for accepting funds from corporations and businesses under the committee's purview,[54] but responded by saying that, "Literally every business in America falls under the Commerce Committee" and that he restricted those contributions to $1,000 and thus was not part of the big-money nature of the campaign finance problem.[54] McCain used his chairmanship to take on the tobacco industry in 1998, proposing legislation that would increase cigarette taxes in order to fund anti-smoking campaigns and reduce the number of teenage smokers, increase research money on health studies, and help states pay for smoking-related health care costs.[69][54] The industry spent some $40–50 million in national advertising in response;[69][54] while McCain's bill had the support of the Clinton administration and many public health groups, most Republican senators opposed it, stating it would create an unwieldy new bureaucracy.[69] The bill failed to gain cloture twice[69] and was seen as a bad political defeat for McCain.[69]
McCain easily won re-election to a third senate term in November 1998, gaining 69 percent of the vote to 27 percent for his Democratic opponent, environmental lawyer Ed Ranger.[54] Ranger was a motorcycle enthusiast[70] and political novice who had only recently returned from Mexico.[71] McCain took no "soft money" during the campaign, but still raised $4.4 million for his bid, explaining that he had needed it in case Washington special interests mounted a strong effort against him.[54] One of Ranger's campaigning points had been that McCain was really more interested in running for president;[54] McCain indeed created a presidential exploratory committee the following month.[70]
2000 presidential campaign
In 1997, TIME named him as one of the "25 Most Influential People in America".[72] His best-selling family memoir, Faith of My Fathers (1999), helped propel his presidential run for 2000. There was a crowded field of Republican candidates, but the big leader in terms of establishment party support and fundraising was Texas Governor and presidential son George W. Bush.
McCain skipped the Iowa caucus, focusing instead on the New Hampshire primary. He campaigned on a bus called the Straight Talk Express, whose name capitalized on his reputation as a political maverick who would speak his mind. In visits to towns he gave a ten-minute talk focused on campaign reform issues, then announced he would stay until he answered every question that everyone had. He made over 200 stops, talking in every town in New Hampshire in an example of "retail politics" that overcame Bush's famous name. He won by 49%-30%, and suddenly was the celebrity of the hour. McCain was famously accessible to the press; as one reporter later recounted, "McCain talked all day long with reporters on his Straight Talk Express bus; he talked so much that sometimes he said things that he shouldn't have, and that's why the media loved him."[73] Other candidates failed to gain traction, and McCain became Bush's primary opponent. Analysts predicted that a McCain victory in the crucial primary in South Carolina would give him unstoppable momentum.
However, McCain lost South Carolina, allowing Bush to regain the momentum. Analysts attribute McCain's loss in South Carolina to Bush's mobilization of the state's evangelical voters. Each side made allegations of negative campaigning against the other. There was alleged to have been a push polling campaign by the Bush camp, in which telephone calls were made to conservative Republican voters in the so-called Deep South to ask them whether they would support McCain if they knew he had an illegitimate interracial daughter with a black woman. McCain in fact had his adopted daughter Bridget from Bangladesh. Accounts of this are covered in the books Bush's Brain and Boy Genius.[74] Additionally, conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh entered the fray supporting Bush. McCain would say of the rumor spreaders, "I believe that there is a special place in hell for people like those."[56]
McCain never completely recovered from his defeat in South Carolina, although he did recover partially by winning in Michigan and Arizona. However, he made serious mistakes that negated any momentum he may have regained with the Michigan victory. In Virginia, he began criticizing conservative Christian leaders Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. McCain lost the Virginia primary and then, a week later, went on to lose 9 of the 13 primaries on Super Tuesday. His overall loss on that day has been attributed to his going "off message", ineffectively accusing Bush of being anti-Catholic in response to his visit to Bob Jones University[75] and getting into a verbal battle with leaders of the Religious Right.[76] McCain would go on to win a few more primaries (Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Vermont), but in a two-man contest he was unable to catch up.
During the George W. Bush years
McCain opposed President Bush's $350 billion in tax breaks over 11 years, which are also known as the Bush tax cuts. McCain argued that he would support the tax cut plan if they were tied to subsequent decreases in spending. McCain later supported the tax cut extension in 2006 as not doing so would amount to a tax increase[77].
McCain differed with Bush or large portions of the Republican base electorate by broadly defining torture, by supporting a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants with some restrictions, by calling for steps to halt anthropogenic global warming, and by supporting some affirmative action and gun control measures.[78] McCain also led the Gang of 14 in the Senate, to preserve the ability of senators to filibuster judicial nominees, but only in "extraordinary circumstances."
Nevertheless, McCain publicly supported President Bush during the 2004 U.S. presidential election;[79] he often praised Bush's management since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.[79] McCain's colleague, and also the 2004 Democratic Presidential nominee, John Kerry of Massachusetts, reportedly asked McCain to be his running mate.[80] McCain accused the "Swift Boat" campaign against Kerry of being "dishonest and dishonorable."[81]
McCain was himself up for re-election as Senator in 2004. There was some talk of Representative Jeff Flake mounting a Republican primary challenge against McCain;[82] Stephen Moore, president of the ideologically-oriented Club for Growth (which attempts to defeat those it considers Republican in Name Only), led talk for the prospect,[83] saying "Our members loathe John McCain."[84] Flake decided not to do it, later saying "I would have been whipped."[83] In the general election McCain had his biggest margin of victory yet, garnering 77 percent of the vote against little-known Democrat Stuart Starky, an eighth grade math teacher[85] whom The Arizona Republic termed a "sacrificial lamb".[82] Exit polls showed that McCain even won a majority of the votes cast by Democrats.[86]
Following his 2000 presidential campaign, McCain became a frequent sight on entertainment programs in the television and film worlds.[82] He hosted the October 12, 2002, episode of Saturday Night Live, making him the third U.S. Senator after Paul Simon and George McGovern, to host the show.[87] In the comedic news realm, he has been a regular guest on The Daily Show, and is a good friend of the host Jon Stewart;[88] in McCain's most recent appearance on the show, Stewart claimed that McCain had been a guest on the Daily Show more times than any other person (11 times according to McCain). McCain appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien in 2005 in a bit entitled "Secrets",[89] and has also appeared several times on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and the Late Show with David Letterman.[90] McCain made a brief cameo on the television show 24 in 2006[90] and also made a cameo in the 2005 summer movie Wedding Crashers.
In the more serious realm, a 2005 made-for-TV movie, Faith of My Fathers, was based on John McCain's memoirs of his experience in the Vietnam War.[91] McCain is also interviewed in the 2005 documentary Why We Fight by Eugene Jarecki.[92]
2008 presidential campaign
| This article or section contains information about one or more candidates in an upcoming or ongoing election. Content may change as the election approaches. |
McCain announced he is seeking the 2008 Presidential nomination from the Republican Party on the February 28, 2007, telecast of the Late Show With David Letterman.[93] [94] McCain officially started his 2008 presidential campaign on April 25, 2007, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Should McCain win in 2008, he would be the oldest person to assume the Presidency in history at initial ascension to office, being 72 years old and surpassing Ronald Reagan, who was 69 years old at his inauguration following the 1980 election. He has dismissed concerns about his age and past health concerns (malignant melanoma in 2000), stating in 2005 that his health was "excellent."[95][96] In the event of his victory in 2008, he would also become the first President of the United States to be born in a U.S. territory outside of the current 50 states.
McCain's oft-cited strengths[97] as a presidential candidate for 2008 included national name recognition, sponsorship of major lobbying and campaign finance reform initiatives, leadership in exposing the Abramoff scandal,[98] his well-known military service and experience as a POW, his experience from the 2000 presidential campaign, extensive fundraising abilities, and strong advocacy for President Bush's re-election campaign in 2004. A Time magazine poll dated January 2007 showed McCain trailing possible Democratic opponent Hillary Rodham Clinton by 1%; results also indicated that more Americans were familiar with McCain than any of the other frontrunners, including Republican candidate and former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, and Democratic hopeful Senator Barack Obama.[99] During the 2006 election cycle, McCain attended 346 events and raised more than $10.5 million on behalf of Republican candidates. He also donated nearly $1.5 million to federal, state and county parties. In a bid to finally gain support from the Christian right, McCain gave the May 2006 commencement address at Jerry Falwell's Liberty University. During his 2000 presidential bid, McCain had called Falwell an "agent of intolerance"; McCain now said that Falwell was no longer as divisive and the two have discussed their shared values,[100]
McCain's second-quarter 2007 fundraising totals fell from $13.6 million in the first quarter to $11.2 million in the second, and expenses continuing such that only $2 million cash was on hand with about $1 million[101] in debts. Both McCain supporters and political observers pointed to McCain's support for the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007, very unpopular among the Republican base electorate, as a primary cause of his fundraising problems. Large-scale campaign staff downsizing took place in early July, with 50 to 100 staffers let go and others taking pay cuts or switching to no pay. McCain's aides said the campaign was considering taking public matching funds, and would focus its efforts on the early primary and caucus states. McCain however said he was not considering dropping out of the race.[102][103] Campaign shakeups reached the top level on July 10, 2007, when his campaign manager and campaign chief strategist both departed.[104]
John McCain has taken his familiar position as an underdog. Senator McCain has returned to his "Straight Talk" strategy even though he no longer rides on the original "Straight Talk" bus. These actions, infighting amongst his rivals, endorsements from Senators Sam Brownback and Joe Lieberman[105], and some key early state endorsements from the editorial boards at the Union Leader, The Des Moines Register, The Portsmouth Herald, and The Boston Globe have led to a rebound in the polls.[106]
Political positions
A lifelong Republican,[107] McCain's American Conservative Union total rating is 82 percent with a 65 percent rating for 2006.[108] However, McCain has supported some initiatives not agreed upon by his own party and has been called a "maverick" by certain members of the American media.[109] McCain's reputation as a maverick stems from his authorship of the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Reform Bill, opposition to torture, support for providing a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants with some restrictions, belief in anthropogenic global warming, mixed record on affirmative action, sometime support for gun control legislation,[110] and opposition to President Bush's $350 billion in tax breaks over 11 years, which are also known as the Bush tax cuts.
In the 2000 elections, many thought of Bush as the more conservative candidate and McCain as the more moderate candidate. In fact, according to Voteview.com,[111] McCain's voting record in the 109th Congress was the third most conservative among senators.[112] However, his voting record during the 107th Congress, from January 2001 through November 2002, placed him as the 6th most liberal Republican senator, according to the same analysis at voteview.com.[113]
McCain also has some traditionally Republican views that include: a strong pro-life voting record, a strong free trade voting record (including a 100% rating from the Cato Institute), wanting private social security accounts, opposition to socialized health care, supporting school vouchers, supporting the death penalty, supporting mandatory sentencing, and supporting welfare reform.
Cultural and political image
Writer John Karaagac states that, "The military holds a special place in American society and in American democracy. In both war and peace, the military becomes the archetype of democratic values and aspirations.... The competing tension of intense institutional loyalty on one hand and guardian of the republic on the other [leads to a situation where] the military view of politics is bound to be ambivalent."[114] Karaagac then sees John McCain as a focal point of this tension and ambivalence.[114] After many years of observing McCain, New York Times columnist David Brooks writes that "there is nobody in politics remotely like him," making reference to his energy and dynamism, his rebelliousness and desire to battle powerful political forces, his willingness to endlessly and truthfully talk with reporters, and his being "driven by an ancient sense of honor."[115] Brooks does not see McCain without political fault, but explains that, "There have been occasions when McCain compromised his principles for political gain, but he was so bad at it that it always backfired."[115] Reason and Los Angeles Times writer Matt Welch, author of McCain: The Myth of a Maverick, sees political pundits as projecting their own ideological fantasies upon McCain,[116] and McCain's "maverick" persona more importantly shields McCain's impulses assembling towards the goal of "restor[ing] your faith in the U.S. government by any means necessary," which would often involve statist solutions, with Theodore Roosevelt as a model and in the end the realization "that Americans 'were meant to transform history' and that sublimating the individual in the service of that 'common national cause' is the wellspring of honor and purpose."[117]
McCain has a history, beginning with his military career, of lucky charms and superstitions to gain fortune. While serving in Vietnam, he demanded that his parachute rigger clean his visor before each flight. On the 2000 campaign, he carried a lucky compass, feather, shoes, pen, penny and, at times, a rock. An incident when McCain misplaced his feather caused a brief panic in the campaign.[118]
McCain has been treated for recurrent skin cancer, including melanoma, in 1993, 2000, and 2002;[119] one of the resulting operations left a noticeable mark on the left side of his face.[120] This, combined with his war wounds and advancing years, led him to repeatedly use a self-deprecating remark during his 2007 campaigning: "I am older than dirt and have more scars than Frankenstein."[120]
The characteristics that led to McCain gaining hundreds of demerits at the Naval Academy have never fully left him; by his own admission, he has an "irremediable" personality trait of being "a wiseass," and as he added: "Occasionally my sense of humor is ill-considered or ill-timed, and that can be a problem."[58] Others have concurred: A 2007 Associated Press story was titled "McCain's WMD Is a Mouth That Won't Quit".[7] Over the years this trait has led to a series of controversial remarks:
- In his 1986 senate campaign, he referred to the Leisure World retirement community as "Seizure World", where "97 percent of the people vote and the other 3 percent are in intensive care,"[58] a joke made worse when he did not directly apologize for any offense caused by it.[58]
- In 1998, McCain was chastised for reportedly making an off-color joke at a Republican fundraiser about President Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, saying "Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly? Because her father is Janet Reno."[121] McCain later apologized to President Clinton and Clinton accepted his apology.[121]
- McCain openly used the term "gook", in reference to his Vietnamese torturers during the Vietnam War, even since his return as a POW.[32] During the 2000 presidential campaign, he repeatedly refused to apologize for his continued use of the term, stating that he reserved its reference only to his captors.[122] Late in the primary season, with growing criticism from the Asian American community in the politically important state of California, McCain reversed his position, and vowed to no longer use the term in public.[123]
- During a campaign appearance in Murrells Inlet, South Carolina on April 18, 2007, McCain was asked a question about possible military action against Iran. He responded by singing “Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran” to the melody of the Beach Boys' song "Barbara Ann", reminiscent of a 1980 parody by Vince Vance & The Valiants.[124] When later confronted about the matter, McCain stated, "My response is lighten up, and get a life." Asked whether the joke he made was insensitive, McCain retorted, "Insensitive to what? The Iranians?"[125]
- During a taping of The Daily Show on April 24, 2007, host Jon Stewart asked McCain, "What do you want to start with, the bomb Iran song or the walk through the market in Baghdad?" McCain responded by saying,"I think maybe shopping in Baghdad ... I had something picked out for you, too — a little IED to put on your desk." On April 25, 2007, representative John Murtha demanded an apology from McCain on the floor of the House, where Murtha said that to make jokes about bringing IEDs back for comedians was unconscionable when so many soldiers are dying from IEDs in Iraq.[126] McCain responded by telling Murtha and other critics to "Lighten up and get a life." [127]
- On May 18, 2007 McCain swore at fellow Senator John Cornyn: According to a Washington Post blog, "During a meeting Thursday on immigration legislation, McCain and Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) got into a shouting match when Cornyn started voicing concerns about the number of judicial appeals that illegal immigrants could receive, according to multiple sources — both Democrats and Republicans — who heard firsthand accounts of the exchange from lawmakers who were in the room... '[Expletive] you! I know more about this than anyone else in the room.'"[128] The comments occurred after Cornyn told McCain, "Wait a second here. I've been sitting in here for all of these negotiations and you just parachute in here on the last day. You're out of line."[128]
The traditions McCain was brought up under have extended to his own family. His son John Sidney IV ("Jack") is currently enrolled in the U.S. Naval Academy, and his son James enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps in 2006, and began recruit training in September 2006.[129] His daughter Meghan graduated from Columbia University. Altogether he has seven children and, as of 2007, four grandchildren. McCain stood by his wife when she disclosed in 1994 an addiction to painkillers and said that she hoped it would give other drug addicts courage in their struggles,[130] and when she suffered a stroke in 2004 due to high blood pressure, but appeared to make a full recovery.[131] They reside in Phoenix, and she remains the chair of the large Anheuser-Busch beer and liquor distributor Hensley & Company, founded by her father.[132][133] By September 2007, he was identifying himself as a Baptist.[134]
Awards
- On February 13, 2007, the World Leadership Forum presented Senator John McCain with the Policymaker of the Year Award, at a private ceremony in Washington. The World Leadership Forum’s annual ‘Policymaker of the Year’ Award is given to a living individual who has created, inspired or strongly influenced important policy or legislation. The nationality or domicile of candidates has no influence on the outcome; the sole criterion is the quality of leadership shown.
- On December 5, 2006, McCain was awarded the Henry M. Jackson Distinguished Service Award by the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.
- On September 28, 2005, The Eisenhower Institute awarded him the Eisenhower Leadership Prize.[135] The prize recognizes individuals whose lifetime accomplishments reflect Dwight D. Eisenhower’s legacy of integrity and leadership.
- In December 2004, McCain became an Honorary Patron of the University Philosophical Society at Trinity College Dublin.[136]
Decorations
Electoral history
| Year | Democrat | Votes | Pct | Republican | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | William E. Hegarty | 41,261 | 31% | John McCain | 89,116 | 66% | Richard K. Dodge | Libertarian | 4,850 | 4% | |||
| 1984 | Harry W. Braun | 45,609 | 22% | John McCain | 162,418 | 78% |
| Year | Democrat | Votes | Pct | Republican | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | 3rd Party | Party | Votes | Pct | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Richard Kimball | 340,965 | 40% | John McCain | 521,850 | 60% | |||||||||||||||||
| 1992 | Claire Sargent | 436,321 | 32% | John McCain | 771,395 | 56% | Evan Mecham | Independent | 145,361 | 11% | Kiana Delamare | Libertarian | 22,613 | 2% | Ed Finkelstein | New Alliance | 6,335 | <1% | |||||
| 1998 | Ed Ranger | 275,224 | 27% | John McCain | 696,577 | 69% | John C. Zajac | Libertarian | 23,004 | 2% | Bob Park | Reform | 18,288 | 2% | |||||||||
| 2004 | Stuart Starky | 404,507 | 21% | John McCain | 1,505,372 | 77% | Ernest Hancock | Libertarian | 51,798 | 3% |
United States presidential election, 2000 (Republican primaries)[139]:
- George W. Bush - 12,034,676 (62.00%)
- John McCain - 6,061,332 (31.23%)
- Alan Keyes - 985,819 (5.08%)
- Steve Forbes - 171,860 (0.89%)
- Unpledged - 61,246 (0.32%)
- Gary Bauer - 60,709 (0.31%)
- Orrin Hatch - 15,958 (0.08%)
- Al Gore (write-in) - 1,155 (0.01%)
- Bill Bradley (write-in) - 1,025 (0.01%)
Works
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| Images and media from Commons | |
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| Learning resources from Wikiversity | |
- Hard Call: Great Decisions and the Extraordinary People Who Made Them
- Character Is Destiny: Inspiring Stories Every Young Person Should Know and Every Adult Should Remember by John McCain, Mark Salter (Random House, October 2005) ISBN 1-4000-6412-0
- Why Courage Matters: The Way to a Braver Life by John McCain, Mark Salter (Random House, April 2004) ISBN 1-4000-6030-3
- Odysseus in America by Jonathan Shay, Max Cleland, John S. McCain (Scribner, November 2002) ISBN 0-7432-1156-1
- Worth the Fighting for: A Memoir by John McCain, Mark Salter (Random House, September 2002) ISBN 0-375-50542-3
- Unfinished Business: Afghanistan, the Middle East and Beyond — Defusing the Dangers That Threaten America's Security by Harlan Ullman, John S. McCain (Citadel Press, June 2002) ISBN 0-8065-2431-6
- Faith of My Fathers by John McCain, Mark Salter (Random House, August 1999) ISBN 0-375-50191-6
- The Reminiscences of Admiral John S. McCain, Jr., U.S. Navy (retired) by John S. McCain (U.S. Naval Institute, 1999) ISBN B0006RY8ZK
See also
References
- ^ Although McCain was not born within a state of the United States, his U.S. citizenship (and future eligibility to be elected to the presidency) was assured at birth both by jus sanguinis, since both of his parents were U.S. citizens, and jus soli, as the Canal Zone was at that time a United States possession.
- ^ a b c d e f Timberg, Robert (1999). "Chapter 1: The Punk", John McCain: An American Odyssey. Fireside. ISBN 978-0684867946.
- ^ a b Alexander, Paul (2002). Man of the People: The Life of John McCain. John Wiley & Sons, p. 19. ISBN 0-471-22829-X.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 20.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 21.
- ^ a b c "McCain's WMD Is A Mouth That Won't Quit", Associated Press for USA Today, 2007-11-04.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 22.
- ^ a b Alexander (2002), p. 28.
- ^ a b c d e f Timberg, Robert (1996). "Chapter 1: Halos and Horns", The Nightingale's Song. Free Press. ISBN 978-0684826738.
- ^ a b "Just the facts about McCain", The Arizona Republic. 2006-09-18. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ a b Holly Bailey. "John McCain: 'I Learned How to Take Hard Blows'", Newsweek, 2007-05-14. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ a b c d e John McCain. Iowa Caucuses '08. Des Moines Register. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ a b c Alexander (2002), p. 32.
- ^ a b c d e FAITH OF MY FATHERS?THE JOHN McCAIN STORY. B-29s over Korea. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ a b c d McCain: Experience to Lead. johnmccain.com (2007-11-02). Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ a b c d e Feinberg, Barbara Silberdick (2000). John Mccain: Serving His Country. Millbrook Press. ISBN 0761319743. p. 18
- ^ a b Freeman, Gregory A. (2002). Sailors to the End: The Deadly Fire on the USS Forrestal and the Heroes Who Fought It. HarperCollins. ISBN 0060936908. p. 25.
- ^ a b Alexander (2002), p. 92.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 37.
- ^ a b McCain, Faith of My Fathers, pp. 185–186.
- ^ a b c Karaagac, John (2000). John McCain: An Essay in Military and Political History. Lexington Books. ISBN 0739101714. pp. 81–82.
- ^ Alexander (2002), pp. 39–41.
- ^ Cherney, Mike. "Veterans salute sailors killed aboard carrier", Hampton Roads, The Virginian Pilot, 2007-07-28, pp. 1 and 8. Retrieved on 2007-07-28.
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzgV5QM5fi8
- ^ a b c R. W. Apple, Jr.. "Adm. McCain's son, Forrestal Survivor, Is Missing in Raid", The New York Times, 1967-10-28. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Calvin Woodward. "McCain on a mission of redemption, flying closer to alone", Associated Press, 2007-11-07. Retrieved on 2007-11-08.
- ^ Image 1 of 8. Republican Presidential Candidate Senator John McCain. Chicago Tribute (2000-02-23). Retrieved on 2007-11-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: Prisoner of War", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ a b Michael Cronin, Bud Day, Ralph Gaither, Paul Galanti, Wesley Schierman and Orson Swindle (2007-10-26). A Trip Downtown - Forty Years of Leadership. johnmccain.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ In search of the old magic. The Economist (2007-05-31). Retrieved on 2007-07-30.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Lieut. Commander John S. McCain III, U.S. Navy. "How the POW's Fought Back", U.S. News & World Report, 1973-05-14.
- ^ R. Kaplan, "Rereading Vietnam", The Atlantic Monthly, August 24, 2007.
- ^ Vietnam War—Senator John McCain of Arizona Biography
- ^ a b Scott Shane. "McCain Pays a Tribute at Funeral of Ex-P.O.W.", The New York Times, 2005-12-15. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ John McCain. Soylent Communications. nndb.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
- ^ Alexander (2002), pp. 60.
- ^ Jake Tapper. "McCain goes back", Salon, 2000-04-25. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ Lander, Mark. Johnmccainbio. New York Times. Vietnamwar.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: Back in the USA", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ a b c d e f Nicholas Kristof. "P.O.W. to Power Broker, A Chapter Most Telling", New York Times, February 27, 2000;, February 27, 2000. Retrieved on 2007-04-22.
- ^ . "Dictionary of American naval Aviation Squadrons — Volume 1". Naval Historical Center.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: Arizona, the early years", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g Frantz, Douglas, "THE 2000 CAMPAIGN: THE ARIZONA TIES; A Beer Baron and a Powerful Publisher Put McCain on a Political Path", The New York Times, pp. A14, February 21, 2000, URL retrieved November 29, 2006.
- ^ "Candidate profile of John McCain", Election 2000, U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ "Just the facts about McCain." azcentral.com Sept. 18, 2006 05:01 PM [1]
- ^ "Recently Reviewed: Faith of My Fathers". Variety. 2005-05-30. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.
- ^ Mary Thornton, "Arizona 1st District John McCain", Washington Post, December 16, 1982
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 97.
- ^ Alexander (2002), pp. 98–99.
- ^ Alexander (2002), pp. 99–100.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 104.
- ^ a b Jake Tapper. "McCain returns to the past", Salon, 2000-04-27. Retrieved on 2007-11-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: McCain becomes the 'maverick'", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ John McCain. NNDB. Retrieved on 2007-11-23.
- ^ a b Morgan Strong. "Senator John McCain talks about the challenges of fatherhood", Dadmag.com, 2000-06-04. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ a b c "McCain reaching out to Christian conservative base", McClatchy Newspapers, McClatchy, June 9, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-09-29.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: The Senate calls", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-23.
- ^ Innes, S. (2006, November 9). Candidates on losing end of election cope differently. The Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
- ^ a b Alexander (2002), pp. 115–119.
- ^ Alexander (2002), p. 120.
- ^ How John McCain Reformed Reason Magazine, March 11, 2005
- ^ Susan F. Rasky To Senator McCain, the Savings and Loan Affair Is Now a Personal Demon NY Times, December 22, 1989
- ^ a b Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: The Keating Five", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-23.
- ^ a b c d Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: Overcoming scandal, moving on", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-11-23.
- ^ Clinton v. City of New York. Supreme Court Collection. Retrieved on July 04, 2005.
- ^ a b Alexander (2002), pp. 173–174.
- ^ a b c Alexander (2002), pp. 176–180.
- ^ a b c d e Alexander (2002), pp. 184–187.
- ^ a b Alexander (2002), p. 187.
- ^ Tamar Lewin. "The 1998 Elections: State by State — West: Arizona", The New York Times, 1998-11-05. Retrieved on 2007-12-21.
- ^ Biography of John McCain. Institute of Government and Public Affairs. Retrieved on 2007-02-19.
- ^ Harpaz, Beth (2001). The Girls in the Van: Covering Hillary. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0312302711. p. 86.
- ^ Ferullo, Mike. "'Push polling' takes center stage in Bush-McCain South Carolina fight; Dems campaign in California", CNN, 2000-02-10. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ Freedman, Samuel G.. "Thanks, but no thanks", Politics2000, Salon.com, 2000-03-10. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ Robinson, B.A. (2000-03-09). RELIGION AND THE U.S. PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES IN THE YEAR 2000. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ [2]
- ^ http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/John_McCain_Gun_Control.htm
- ^ a b Sean Loughlin. "McCain praises Bush as 'tested'", CNN.com, 2004-08-30. Retrieved on 2007-11-14.
- ^ The New York Times reported on June 11, 2004, that Kerry, "has repeatedly and personally asked Senator John McCain...to consider being his running mate, but Mr. McCain has refused, people who have spoken to both men said Friday." [3]
- ^ Coile, Zachary. "Vets group attacks Kerry; McCain defends Democrat", San Francisco Chronicle, 2004-08-06. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ a b c Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller. "John McCain Report: The 'maverick' goes establishment", The Arizona Republic, 2007-03-01. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ a b David Baumann. "Sacred Cows and Revered Rodents", National Journal, 2006-03-25. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ John Whitesides. "Republican 'Club' on War Path Against Moderates", Reuters, 2002-09-04. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ Holly Wells. "McCain, Starky keep it friendly", Arizona Daily Wildcat, 2004-10-18. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ "Election 2004: U.S. Senate - Arizona - Exit Poll". Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ "List of Saturday Night Live hosts and musical guests". Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
- ^ "Transcript of McCain and Jon Stewart", The Third Path, 2006-04-05. Retrieved on 2007-01-30.
- ^ Celebrity secrets: McCain secrets. Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Retrieved on 2006-08-16.
- ^ a b imdb.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
- ^ Faith of My Fathers at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2006-08-01.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0436971/
- ^ McCain launches White House bid (stm). BBC NEWS. Retrieved on 2007-05-06.
- ^ STOLBERG, SHERYL GAY. "How to Be the McCain of '04, by John McCain", The New York TImes, 2003-10-08. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ McCain, John. Interview transcript. Meet the Press. MSNBC. 2005-06-19. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
- ^ McCain, John. Interview transcript. Larry King Live. CNN. 2005-11-03. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
- ^ Balz, Dan. "For Possible '08 Run, McCain Is Courting Bush Loyalists", Washington Post, 2006-02-12, p. A01. Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ Richard Cohen. "McCain's Day to Crow", Washington Post, January 5, 2006, p. A15.
- ^ Tony Karon. "TIME Poll: Hillary vs. McCain?", Time, 2007-01-25. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
- ^ VIDEO: McCain Says Jerry Falwell is No Longer an ‘Agent of Intolerance’. Think Progress (2006-04-02). Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
- ^ "More woes for McCain: Debt and departure of 2 strategists from Iowa campaign", The Associated Press, Associated Press, 2007-07-12. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ "McCain lags in fundraising, cuts staff", cnn.com, July 2, 207. Accessed July 6, 2007.
- ^ "Lagging in Fundraising, McCain Reorganizes Staff", NPR, July 2, 2007. Accessed July 6, 2007.
- ^ SIDOTI, LIZ. "McCain Campaign Suffers Key Shakeups", The Associated Press, Associated Press, 2007-07-10. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ "Coverage of Lieberman endorsement of John McCain", ABC Nightline, 18 December 2007.
- ^ http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071217/NEWS/712170331
- ^ Joshua Green, "The Big Switch," Washington Monthly, May 2002.
- ^ http://www.acuratings.org/2006all.htm#AZ
- ^ Barone, Michael, et al. The Almanac of American Politics, 2006 (2005), p. 93–98.
- ^ http://www.ontheissues.org/2008/John_McCain_Gun_Control.htm
- ^ http://voteview.com voteview.com
- ^ http://voteview.com/SEN109.HTM
- ^ http://voteview.com/SEN107.HTM
- ^ a b Karaagac, John McCain: An Essay in Military and Political History, p. 248.
- ^ a b David Brooks. "The Character Factor", The New York Times, 2007-11-13. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ Welch, Matt (2007). McCain: The Myth of a Maverick. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0230603967.
- ^ Matt Welch. "Do we need another T.R.?", Los Angeles Times, 2006-11-26. Retrieved on 2007-12-19.
- ^ "A Candidate's Lucky Charms", Washington Post, Saturday, February 19, 2000; Page C01, The Washington Post Company, February 19, 2000. Retrieved on 2006-04-08.
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- ^ a b Roger Simon. "McCain's Health and Age Present Campaign Challenge", The Politico, 2007-01-27. Retrieved on 2007-11-23.
- ^ a b Corn, David. "A joke too bad to print?", Salon.com, 1998-06-25. Retrieved on 2006-08-16.
- ^ Tapper, Jake (2000-02-17). Straight talk. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ Ma, Jason. "McCain Apologizes for ‘Gook’ Comment", Asian Week, 2000-02-14. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ "McCain Revives Song Parody to Make Point on Iran", Fox News, Fox News, 2007-03-19. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ "MoveOn firing salvo at Bomb-Bomb McCain", The Associated Press, Associated Press, 2007-04-21. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ "McCain Brushes Off Latest Criticism of His Sense of Humor", 2007-04-26.
- ^ "John McCain to Murtha: 'Lighten Up,' 'Get a Life'", 2007-04-26.
- ^ a b McCain, Cornyn Engage in Heated Exchange Washington Post Blog Capital Exchange. May 18, 2007 Retrieved June 21, 2007
- ^ "Sen. McCain’s youngest son joins Marine Corps", Marine Corps Times, Associated Press, July 31, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-01.
- ^ Silverman, Amy, "How Cindy McCain was outed for drug addiction", Salon.com, October 18, 1999 (URL last accessed April 4, 2007).
- ^ MICHAEL, JANOFSKY. "Senator McCain's Wife Has Minor Stroke; Good Prognosis Is Cited", The New York Times, New York Times, 2004-05-14. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
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- ^ McCAIN, John Sidney, III, (1936 - ). bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
- ^ a b Election Statistics from the Clerk of the House of Representatives
- ^ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=55218
- Michael Barone, et al. The Almanac of American Politics: 2006 (2005) pp 93–98
External links
- Presidential campaign
- Presidential Campaign Website
- John McCain's presidential campaign finance reports and data at the Federal Election Commission
- John McCain's presidential campaign contributions at OpenSecrets.org
- Sen. John McCain's Candidate Position Tracker from CFR.org
- Senate
- John McCain's biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- John McCain's voting record maintained by The Washington Post
- John McCain's campaign finance reports and data at the Federal Election Commission
- John McCain's campaign contributions at OpenSecrets.org
- John McCain's biography, voting record, and interest group ratings at Project Vote Smart
- John McCain's issue positions and quotes at On The Issues
- Grassroots supporters
- Blogs4McCain.com - Bloggers for McCain
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- McCain Talk - Discussion Forums
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- Documentaries, topic pages and databases
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- NewsHour with Jim Lehrer - Vote 2008: John McCain
- New York Times — John McCain news stories and commentary
- John McCain at the Open Directory Project
- Select2008
- Media coverage
- John McCain's high school days [4]
- "The Real John McCain," The Nation, December 12, 2005
- "Interview with Tavis Smiley," PBS.org, January 6, 2006
- "Views on Iraq Strategy," CBS News, January 12, 2007
- "The Case for McCain," National Review at JohnMcCain.com, March 9, 2007
- "McCain v. Reid," Time, April 20, 2007
- "It's A Matter Of Honor," The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 20, 2007
- "Be Afraid of President McCain," Reason Magazine, April 2007
- "An Enduring Peace Built on Freedom: Securing America's Future" by John McCain Foreign Affairs
| United States House of Representatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by John Jacob Rhodes |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona's 1st congressional district 1983 – 1987 |
Succeeded by John Jacob Rhodes III |
| United States Senate | ||
| Preceded by Barry Goldwater |
United States Senator (Class 3) from Arizona 1987 – present Served alongside: Dennis DeConcini, Jon Kyl |
Incumbent |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by Daniel Inouye |
Chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee 1995 – 1997 |
Succeeded by Ben Nighthorse Campbell |
| Preceded by Larry Pressler |
Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee 1997 – 2001 |
Succeeded by Ernest Hollings |
| Preceded by Ernest Hollings |
Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee 2003 – 2005 |
Succeeded by Ted Stevens |
| Preceded by Ben Nighthorse Campbell |
Chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee 2005 – 2007 |
Succeeded by Byron Dorgan |
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|---|---|
| Class 1: Ashurst • McFarland • Goldwater • Fannin • DeConcini • Kyl Class 3: Smith • Cameron • Hayden • Goldwater • McCain |
|
| Arizona's current delegation to the United States Congress | |
|---|---|
| Senators | John McCain (R), Jon Kyl (R) |
| Representative(s) | Rick Renzi (R), Trent Franks (R), John Shadegg (R), Ed Pastor (D), Harry Mitchell (D), Jeff Flake (R), Raúl Grijalva (D), Gabrielle Giffords (D) |
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| Straw polls · General polls · Candidates · Congressional support · Fundraising · Timeline | |
| Democratic Party | Straw polls · Primary polls · General polls · Debates · Primaries · Convention |
| Candidates | Joe Biden · Hillary Clinton · Chris Dodd · John Edwards · Mike Gravel · Dennis Kucinich · Barack Obama · Bill Richardson |
| Withdrawn | Evan Bayh · Dal LaMagna · Tom Vilsack |
| Republican Party | Straw polls · Primary polls · General polls · Debates · Primaries · Convention |
| Candidates | Hugh Cort · John H. Cox · Dan Gilbert · Rudy Giuliani · Mike Huckabee · Duncan Hunter · Alan Keyes · John McCain · Ron Paul · Mitt Romney · Fred Thompson |
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| Other 2008 elections: House · Senate · Gubernatorial | |
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | McCain, John |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | McCain, John Sidney, III (full name) |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Senator from Arizona |
| DATE OF BIRTH | August 29, 1936 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | U.S. Panama Canal Zone |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |
Categories: Semi-protected against vandalism | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since November 2007 | Future election candidates | John McCain | 1936 births | Living people | United States Senators from Arizona | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Arizona | American memoirists | American military writers | American motivational writers | American political writers | United States Navy officers | United States naval aviators | American military personnel of the Vietnam War | Recipients of the Silver Star medal | Recipients of the Legion of Merit | Recipients of US Distinguished Flying Cross | Recipients of the Bronze Star medal | Recipients of the Purple Heart medal | Recipients of the Prisoner of War Medal | Torture victims | United States Naval Academy graduates | Vietnam War prisoners of war | People from Arizona | American adoptive parents | Shot-down aviators | Military brats | Baptists from the United States | Zonians | United States presidential candidates, 2000 | United States presidential candidates, 2008 | Celebrity politicians