Tag Archive | "Flip-Flops"

McCain: ‘The Myth of a Maverick’

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Book Review: ‘McCain: The Myth of a Maverick

Editorial Reviews:

“How the journalistic elite got taken for a ride on the Straight Talk Express is one of the revelatory sagas of modern-day Washington. Matt Welch has the audacity to think that John McCain’s views matter, not only his legends, and he smokes out McCain with gusto. You don’t have to follow him every inch of the way into libertarian politics–as I do not–to be dazzled by the light he casts on a telling tragedy of American politics.”–Todd Gitlin, author of The Bulldozer and the Big Tent: Blind Republicans, Lame Democrats, and the Recovery of American Ideals

McCain: The Myth of a Maverick“John McCain’s love affair with the news media is a decade old. But McCain makes clear that that love affair is over.”–Glenn Reynolds, author of An Army of Davids: How Markets and Technology Empower Ordinary People to Beat Big Media, Big Government, and Other Goliaths, and blogger at Instapundit

Praise for Matt Welch’s Op-Ed piece on John McCain in the Los Angeles Times, “Do We Really Need Another T.R.?”:

“I hope a lot of Americans read Matt Welch’s definitive LAT editorial on the subject of McCain’s political philosophy…. [I]t should be a reputation-maker for Welch.”– Colby Cosh, columnist for Canada’s National Post

“Congratulations to the LAT’s Matt Welch for this morning’s penetrating column on John McCain…. Listen up, pundits. Matt Welch has sent you a signal. It won’t kill you to look into the mind of the desert angel and see what he thinks.” — Todd Gitlin, author of The Intellectuals and the Flag

“The redoubtable Matt Welch does the unconscionable today: he writes an op-ed for the LA Times in which he examines John McCain’s actual views on the issues…. Hear hear…. [McCain's] flip-flops get a lot of attention mainly because they’re easy to find and satisfying to point out. Actually looking past his occasionally “maverick” views is far more important.” — Kevin Drum, The Washington Monthly

“Matt Welch of the Los Angeles Times does a significant public service in exposing John McCain’s intrusive, statist agenda.” –Doug Bandow, author of Foreign Follies: America’s New Global Empire

“Kudos to Matt Welch for managing to reveal some truths about St. McCain without falling into the usual trap of trying to argue about where he actually fits on the imaginary political spectrum and instead just telling us what the dude thinks about things.” –Duncan Black, proprietor of the Eschaton (Atrios) blog

“[A]n astute analysis.” –Joel Connolly, Seattle Post-Intelligencer

“Great op-ed by Matt Welch on what John McCain actually thinks about the world.” –Matthew Yglesias, The American Prospect

“Matt Welch, now with the Los Angeles Times, perspicaciously sizes up everyone’s favorite politician — especially given that no one seems to actually care about his political beliefs — Sen. John McCain. [...] [R]ead the whole thing, before this whole “McCain for President” thing goes too far.” — Brian Dohery, Reason

Product Description:

John McCain is one of the most familiar, sympathetic, and overexposed figures in American politics, yet his concrete governing philosophy and actual track record have been left curiously unexamined, mostly because of the massive distractions in his official biography, but also because of his ingenious strategy of talking ad infinitum to each and every access-craving media person who happens by. The more he has spouted, the less journalists have bothered trying to see through the fog.

McCain gives the voting public what it wants but can’t find — a flesh-and-bones political portrait of a man onto whom people are forever projecting their own ideological fantasies. It is a psychological key for decoding his allegedly ‘maverick’ actions, and the first realistic assessment of what a John McCain presidency may look like. McCain will quickly lay out in overlapping detail the root cause of the senator’s worldview: his personal transformation from underachieving punk to war hawk uber-patriot, in which he used the “higher power” of American nationalism to save his life and soul.

As McCain wrenches himself inside-out in pursuit of the prize that eluded him in 2000, McCain will look behind the war hero, behind the maverick reformer. Journalist and pundit Matt Welch brings to this project an investigative eye and a coolly analytical mindset to provide Republicans, Democrats and Independents a picture of the man in full before they enter the voting booth in 2008.

See all Editorial Reviews

Popularity: 6% [?]

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McCain’s ‘Double-Flip’ Express

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Popularity: 8% [?]

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John McSwift-Boat’s flip-flops, double-talk, somersaults and fear-mongering lies

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John McBOMB McCain Flip-Flops Like A Drunk Old Sailor

EJ_Dionne: Who Will Win (or Lose) the Flip-Flopping Contest?

…. So it’s now clear that since Republicans will have trouble winning this election on issues, especially with the country in a mood to punish the G.O.P., John McCain’s allies hope to win this by casting Barack Obama as — I quote Michael Shear’s article in today’s Post — “an opportunistic and self-obsessed politician who will do and say anything to get elected.”

Conservative commentators are picking up this cry.

On Friday, Charles Krauthammer’s column was headlined: “The Ever-Malleable Mr. Obama” He cited Obama decision to get out of the public financing system for his campaign after he said he’s stay in; his decision to support elements of the FISA bill that he once opposed; and his variations on NAFTA.

Bob Novak weighed in on Monday with a column headlined: “Obama’s Dodge on Handguns.” But John McCain has been no slouch on changing positions.


• He was against the Bush tax cuts before he was for them.
• He used to be against off-shore drilling and now he’s for it.
• He sharply criticized religious right leaders in 2000, but has courted them (to mixed effect) this year.

…MORE: McCain’s flourishing flip-flop list

Newsweek’s Evan Thomas has a piece on the flip-flopping sweepstakes that looks at both candidates. My hunch is that this issue won’t work as well for the Republicans this year as it did against John Kerry in 2004 (and Kerry, by the way, was far more consistent on issues than he got credit for).

But the fight is clearly on. So: Who is the bigger flip-flopper between these two candidates? Will the G.O.P. make this charge work? Or will the Obama folks successfully turn the issue around against McCain? …[MORE >>]

RELATED: Candidates Think Flip-Flopping is the Only Way to Win Elections

Special Comment: Obama’s FISA Opportunity

Popularity: 12% [?]

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McCain Lies, Flip-Flops and Ineptitude - A Lying Chameleon!

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John McCain - A temperamental ‘political chameleon’ who dumped crippled first-wife for Cindy and her ‘Beer Inheritance’

Popularity: 21% [?]

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John McBOMB’s Straight-Talk To Hell!

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John ‘Bomb Bomb Iran’ McCain and ‘Bent-Talk,’ Lying and Flip-Flopping

McBOMB is mangling things again — Is it lack of knowledge of facts or is he having another ‘Senior Moment’?

On Thursday, he made a very specific measurement as to the extent of troop reductions in Iraq, saying: “I can tell you that it is succeeding.” “I can look you in the eye and tell you it’s succeeding. We have drawn down to pre-surge levels.”

Wrong McBOMB!

The truth is that the troops in Iraq currently number 155,000, well above the pre-surge level of 130,000.

    John McCain’s Straight-Talk Express

McCain refused to burge: “I said we had drawn down,” the Senator declared during a press conference. “I said we have drawn down and we have drawn down three of the five brigades. We have drawn down three of the five brigades. We have drawn down the marines. The rest will be home the end of July. That’s just facts, the facts as I stated them.”

Campaigning in Great Falls, Montana, Obama immediatedly seized on McBOMB’s gaffe, questioning the Republican nominee’s grasp of the situation in Iraq.

Obama said:

“There are honest differences about how to move forward in Iraq, just like there were honest differences about whether or not we should go to war. John McCain was for the invasion of Iraq; I opposed it. John McCain wants to continue George Bush’s war in Iraq indefinitely; I want to end it. So there’s going to be a clear choice for the American people this November.

“But that’s not what John McCain’s been talking about the last few days. He’s been proposing a joint trip to Iraq that’s nothing more than a political stunt. He’s even been using it to raise a few dollars for his campaign. But it seems like Senator McCain’s a lot more interested in my travel plans than the facts, because yesterday – in his continued effort to put the best light on a failed policy – he stood up in Wisconsin and said, “We have drawn down to pre-surge levels” in Iraq.

“That’s not true, and anyone running for Commander-in-Chief should know better. As the saying goes, you’re entitled to your own view, but not your own facts. We’ve got around 150,000 troops in Iraq – 20,000 more than we had before the surge. We have plans to get down to around 140,000 later this summer – that’s still more troops than we had in Iraq before the surge. And today, Senator McCain refused to correct his mistake. Just like George Bush, when he was presented with the truth, he just dug in and refused to admit his mistake. His campaign said it amounts to “nitpicking.”

“Well I don’t think tens of thousands of American troops amounts to nitpicking. Tell that to the young men and women who are serving bravely and brilliantly under our flag. Tell that to the families who have seen their loved ones fight tour after tour after tour of duty in a war that should’ve never been authorized and never been waged.

“It’s time for a debate that’s based on the truth, and I can’t think of anything more important than how many Americans are in harm’s way. It’s time for a debate that’s based on how we’re going to end this war – not a debate that’s based on raising a few dollars for John McCain’s campaign.

“The American people have had enough spin. Just this week, we were reminded by President Bush’s own former spokesman of how it was deception – not straight talk – that misled the American people into war. It’s time to cut through the tough talk so that we can be straight with the American people about a war that’s cost us thousands of lives and hundreds of billions of dollars without making us safer. It’s time to end the political game-playing so that we can finally end this war. That’s what I’ll do in this campaign. And that’s what I’ll do when I’m President of the United States.”

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