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May 8, 2008 - 8:19am
![]() Sen. John McCain (AP) On television Tuesday, a presidential candidate I know well was blasting the Senate's "shabby treatment" of judicial nominees and basking in virtue for having voted to confirm presidential picks despite differences with their philosophies. The speech made me recall a decidedly different incident I'd witnessed years ago by another 2008 presidential candidate I know just as well. Let me tell you about both. They are the John McCains. "We've seen and heard the shabby treatment accorded to nominees, the caricature and code words shouted or whispered," said McCain, the 2008 Republican nominee-in-waiting, at Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, N.C. He said Senate confirmation hearings have become "a gauntlet of abuse." After praising Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alioto as the models for nominations he would make as president, McCain added: "And yet when President Bill Clinton nominated Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsberg to serve on the high court, I voted for their confirmation, as did all but a few of my fellow Republicans. Why? For the simple reason that the nominees were qualified, and it would have been petty, and partisan, and disingenuous to insist otherwise. Those nominees represented the considered judgment of the president of the United States. And under our Constitution, it is the president's call to make." As McCain harkened back to his exemplary temperate advise-and-consent deportment, I harkened back just a bit earlier to a judicial confirmation incident in which McCain was decidedly intemperate. It ended with the most unusual twist I've ever encountered in decades of covering overheated politicians. Early in Clinton's presidency, McCain dashed onto the Senate floor late one afternoon and single-handedly torpedoed a federal judgeship nomination in a way never seen before or since. (We won't name the nominee here; he suffered enough abuse that day to last his lifetime.) With a flash of temper and unstoppable determination, McCain read into the record the nominee's highly confidential U.S. military psychiatric profile. It is illegal to disseminate that information; but senators enjoy an immunity that permits them to say anything on the Senate floor without fear of prosecution. The nominee, an apparently good and patriotic man, had sought confidential counseling decades earlier while serving his country's military; suddenly his most private matters were thrust before his family, friends and strangers -- even though it had nothing to do with his judicial performance in the years that followed. Back then, I did commentaries on CNN, alternating every other day with columnists Rowland Evans or Robert Novak. I barely knew McCain then, but I telephoned McCain's press secretary saying I was going to air a commentary sharply criticizing his outrageous violation of the nominee's privacy and, while I'd be happy to listen to his explanation, nothing he could say would cause me to cancel the commentary. He didn't call. My commentary aired -- and it was the most strongly worded opinion piece I've written, before or since. Early the next morning, my phone rang. "Hi, Marty. John McCain." The senator said he'd seen my commentary -- and that he agreed with every word of it. He even thanked me for it and said he was ashamed of what he had done. He said he'd only been thinking at the time that the Democrats had once shot down a Republican president's Supreme Court nomination of Robert Bork -- and finally he had something to even the score. He'd raced to the Senate floor late in the day hoping to get his blast on the television nightly news. He said he would never make that mistake again. Then he asked if I wanted to join him for lunch that day in the Senate dining room. We lunched. Then we check-wrestled (I won and bought). In between, we hashed, but just briefly, the confirmation incident. Then we hit other issues, how crazy Washington can be, and friendly small talk. Of course politicians love to court journalists. But in decades of covering politicians I'd never encountered a politician who responded to criticism that was so harsh in ways that were so contrite, even gracious. Never before. Never since. In recent days we have seen both McCains. The flinty one and the funny one. You know them when you see them in your living rooms. Come autumn, we'll surely see them again, tag teaming either Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. You'll have a ringside seat at the presidential "WrestleMania.'' Don't be surprised if it turns out to be two against one. (Martin Schram writes political analysis for Scripps Howard News Service. E-mail him at martin.schram(at)gmail.com.)
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I remember that. I also
Submitted by old_curmudgeon on May 8, 2008 - 10:32am.I remember that. I also remember thinking, "What a scumbag!!" Hmmm, my opinion hasn't changed a whole lot, come to think of it. And I know a lot more about McCain now than I did then.
I wonder if McCain will release his psychological profile records - before and after POW time? I doubt it - personal information you see...not relevant - for someone who will have their finger on the trigger of a whole bunch of nukes - who has a known record of losing his temper...not important...privileged information...MYOB.
Just this old curmudgeon's opinion...
Two John McCains eh? Does
Submitted by pollchecker on May 8, 2008 - 11:44am.Two John McCains eh? Does that officially qualify him as a flip flopper?
"Which way will he go? Which way will he go?"
Yes, there are two McCains.
Submitted by km0591 on May 8, 2008 - 11:54am.Yes, there are two McCains. One who can be gracious and insightful, and one who can demonstrate monumental lapses in judgement and of basic understanding.
The problem here is that being president of the United States is not a job for a man who has a persistent tendency for the latter even if the former, more benign charateristics are noted. There is too much power available, and, as we have seen in the past 8 years, such lapses can produce catastrophic results.
Do we really want to a man whose finger is on the trigger of massive weapons of war who would make a monumentally stupid decision in a fit a pique to "even the score" with some other nation? Sorry, in such a situation, subsequent apologies, no matter how gracious, will just not matter.
you do realize that it is
Submitted by pollchecker on May 8, 2008 - 1:41pm.you do realize that it is only a matter of time when the real "bust a vein in his forehead" John McCain will surface for all the world to se. It's NOT a matter of if, but a matter of WHEN. In this YouTube age, it will be priceless.
All this time I thought flip
Submitted by buckethead on May 8, 2008 - 2:14pm.All this time I thought flip flops were cheap footwear. Oh well, cheap is right.
Okay, so Senator McCain
Submitted by ralphcat on May 8, 2008 - 4:36pm.Okay, so Senator McCain acknowledged to you that he was out of line. Did he apologize to the nominee in question? Did he make a subsequent statement on the Senate floor publicly castigating himself for his boorish and outrageous behavior? Did you at the time write a follow-up about the Senator's admission that he had behaved shamefully?
If the answers are no, no, no, then he got just what he wanted from you -- the way he always uses the press -- you got to meet "Mr Warm and Humble" and he didn't have to come clean in public.
I'm just sayin'
Like a bolt out of the blue, fate steps in and sees you through -- Jiminy Cricket
So , he was upset that pig
Submitted by Jim C on May 8, 2008 - 9:13pm.So , he was upset that pig Bork was kept off of the supreme court ? That scum was unfit to be a judge of any kind . You didn't see " two Mccains " you simply saw one nasty phony who looked at the event as a chance to suck up to a naive journalist . Why not , the damage was already done . So invite the said journalist to the big fancy senate dining room and pretend to be contrite , he'd already accomplished his dirty work . Hell , he didn't even have to pay for the meal . While I realize you probably believe this kind of thing is harmless ( it might even lead to a story , huh ) , I beg to differ . This type of " harmless " socializing is at the root of our present journalistic morass . The present batch of so called reporters are giving Mccain a free pass probably because of just such chummy behavior . Its hard to jet tough on your important buddy that jokes around with you on his plane ( or invites you to the fancy senate dining room ) .
While I realize this was not the purpose of your article , thats what I got from it . You , I'm sure quite unintentionally , gave an excellent example of how to defang a journalist . While you may say it didn't effect you , many of your brethren are showing the insidious effects , ( come into my house , said the spider to the fly ) . I long for the good old days when reporters kept an arms length from their potential subjects . But , hey , you might not get invited to the best parties or get those in depth interviews on his private jet over drinks .
Google McCain and Songbird
Submitted by staunchdem on May 8, 2008 - 10:17pm.Google McCain and Songbird together and you'll see about two McCains and it ain't pretty.
Once the spotlight hits him he'll be toast.
Just today his wife said she'd never release her tax records.
Oddly enough in 2004 Mrs. Kerry was forced to release at least some of hers.
Hypocrisy and doublespeak are McKKKain's stock in trade.