The McCain Thread

Who will be McCain's runningmate?

  • Mitt Romney (former Governor of Massachussets)

  • Mike Huckabee (former Governor of Arkansas)

  • Rudy Giuliani (former mayor New York)

  • Charlie Christ (current governor of Florida)

  • Fred Thompson (former US Senator of Tennessee)

  • Condaleeza Rice (Secretary of State)

  • Colin Powell (former Secretary of State)

  • JC Watts (former Republican chairman of Republican House)

  • Rob Portman (Director of Office of Management and Budget)

  • Tim Pawlenty (Governor of Minnesota)

  • Bobby Jindal (Governor of Lousiana)

  • Mark Sanford (Governor of South Carolina)

  • Lindsey Graham (US Senator of South Carolina)

  • Sarah Palin (Governor of Alaska)

  • Kay Hutchinson (US Senator of Texas)

  • John Thune (US Senator of South Dakota)

  • Haley Barbour (Governor of Mississippi)

  • Marsha Blackburn (US Tenessee Representative)

  • Joseph Lieberman (US Senator of Connecticut)

  • Sonny Perdue (Governor of Georgia)

  • George Allen (former US Senator of Virginia)

  • Matt Blunt (Governor of Missouri)

  • some other US Senator, congressman

  • some other Governor

  • some dark horse like Dick Cheney


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I'm watching CNN and It showed lived coverage of McCain landing in St. Paul and it showed Levi Johnson and Bristol standing with each other, McCain walked over and pretty much put their hands together and it looked like he made them hold hands. lol.

this shows how out-of-date McCain is. this example, along with many others, show that he doesn't really get that, in this day and age, cameras can record EVERYTHING. it's pretty clear that McCain doesn't understand the power and the potential of today's technology.

edit: nvm, i saw the live coverage and i didn't think it was anything. my comment about McCain and technology still stands though...
 
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If McCain can't take on Larry King, how can he survive 3 debates with Obama?
 
I'm watching CNN and It showed lived coverage of McCain landing in St. Paul and it showed Levi Johnson and Bristol standing with each other, McCain walked over and pretty much put their hands together and it looked like he made them hold hands. lol.

So?
 
Oh I doubt it...he is scared of O'Reilly and Hannity until he wins the election, then he will be on them all

Obama's going to be on O'Reilly tonight.........curiously the same night that McCain's giving his acceptance speech.....hmmmmmm....
 
I'm watching CNN and It showed lived coverage of McCain landing in St. Paul and it showed Levi Johnson and Bristol standing with each other, McCain walked over and pretty much put their hands together and it looked like he made them hold hands. lol.

Y'know....I just wonder what McCain said to Levi when he shook his hand.....:cwink:

In fact, I wonder what Levi is thinking about this whole thing....."D*** I should've kept my pants on!! :wow: "
 
Obama's going to be on O'Reilly tonight.........curiously the same night that McCain's giving his acceptance speech.....hmmmmmm....

What's your point? It is no different than when John McCain went on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno the very same night that Obama was giving his speech last week at the DNC.
 
Obama's going to be on O'Reilly tonight.........curiously the same night that McCain's giving his acceptance speech.....hmmmmmm....


Well thats pretty much a "duh" move........that is the night that will take away alittle of McCain's media time......but not much. So it was a good move on the part of the Obama campaign......just enough take away without being called scene stealer....:cwink:
 
What's your point? It is no different than when John McCain went on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno the very same night that Obama was giving his speech last week at the DNC.

Actually that is not what I see as the scene stealer at all.......the scene stealer was the VP pick being talked about ALL THURSDAY, and then early Friday being announced.....that took far more away than a Leno spot.
 
What's your point? It is no different than when John McCain went on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno the very same night that Obama was giving his speech last week at the DNC.

No....I thought McCain went on Leno on Monday of that week....NOT on the same night of Obama's speech ( Thursday ).

in fact, I thought McCain released the "congratulations" ad on Thursday.

the only "newsworthy" thing the McCain camp did on Thursday was announce that he'd make his VP choice on Friday....
 
Y'know....I just wonder what McCain said to Levi when he shook his hand.....:cwink:

McCain probably said something creepy like "Was she any good?" or "Hope that teenage strange was worth all this, kid"

If he was a hipper guy, he'd have said "Wrap it before you tap it next time, Dawg!"

:funny:

jag
 
McCain probably said something creepy like "Was she any good?" or "Hope that teenage strange was worth all this, kid"

If he was a hipper guy, he'd have said "Wrap it before you tap it next time, Dawg!"

:funny:

jag


:hehe:
 
McCain probably said something creepy like "Was she any good?" or "Hope that teenage strange was worth all this, kid"

If he was a hipper guy, he'd have said "Wrap it before you tap it next time, Dawg!"

:funny:

jag


:woot:
 
Still his "soulmate"?

McCain had criticized earmarks from Palin

Three times in recent years, the Arizona senator's lists of 'objectionable' pork spending have included earmarks requested by his new running mate.
By Tom Hamburger, Richard Simon and Janet Hook, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
September 3, 2008
WASILLA, ALASKA -- For much of his long career in Washington, John McCain has been throwing darts at the special spending system known as earmarking, through which powerful members of Congress can deliver federal cash for pet projects back home with little or no public scrutiny. He's even gone so far as to publish "pork lists" detailing these financial favors.

Three times in recent years, McCain's catalogs of "objectionable" spending have included earmarks for this small Alaska town, requested by its mayor at the time -- Sarah Palin.

Now, McCain, the likely Republican presidential nominee, has chosen Palin as his running mate, touting her as a reformer just like him.

McCain has made opposition to pork-barrel spending a central theme of his 2008 campaign. "Earmarking deprives federal agencies of scarce resources, at the whim of individual members of Congress," McCain has said.

But records show that Palin -- first as mayor of Wasilla and recently as governor of Alaska -- was far from shy about pursuing tens of millions in earmarks for her town, her region and her state.

This year, Palin, who has been governor for nearly 22 months, defended earmarking as a vital part of the legislative system. "The federal budget, in its various manifestations, is incredibly important to us, and congressional earmarks are one aspect of this relationship," she wrote in a newspaper column.

In 2001, McCain's list of spending that had been approved without the normal budget scrutiny included a $500,000 earmark for a public transportation project in Wasilla. The Arizona senator targeted $1 million in a 2002 spending bill for an emergency communications center in town -- one that local law enforcement has said is redundant and creates confusion.

McCain also criticized $450,000 set aside for an agricultural processing facility in Wasilla that was requested during Palin's tenure as mayor and cleared Congress soon after she left office in 2002. The funding was provided to help direct locally grown produce to schools, prisons and other government institutions, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan watchdog group.

Wasilla received $11.9 million in earmarks from 2000 to 2003. The results of this spending are very apparent today. (The town also benefited from $15 million in federal funds to promote regional rail transportation.)

The community transit center is a landmark: a one-story, tile-fronted building with a drive-through garage. Its fleet of 10 buses provides service throughout the region. Mat-Su Community Transit Agency officials say the building was made possible with a combination of federal money and matching gifts from a private foundation.

Taylor Griffin, a McCain campaign spokesman, said that when Palin became mayor in 1996, "she faced a system that was broken. Small towns like Wasilla in Alaska depended on earmarks to take care of basic needs. . . . That was something that Gov. Palin was alarmed about and was one of the formative experiences that led her toward the reform-oriented stance that she has taken as her career has progressed."

Palin, he said, was "disgusted" that small towns like hers were dependent on earmarks.

Public records paint a different picture:

Wasilla had received few if any earmarks before Palin became mayor. She actively sought federal funds -- a campaign that began to pay off only after she hired a lobbyist with close ties to Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who long controlled federal spending as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. He made funneling money to Alaska his hallmark.

Steven Silver was a former chief of staff for Stevens. After he was hired, Wasilla obtained funding for several projects in 2002, including an additional $600,000 in transportation funding.

That year, a local water and sewer project received $1.5 million, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense, which combs federal spending measures to identify projects inserted by congressional members.

When Palin spoke after McCain introduced her as his running mate at a rally in Ohio last week, she made fun of earmarking. She said she had rejected $223 million in federal funds for a bridge linking Ketchikan to an island with an airport and 50 residents, referring to it by its derogatory label: the "bridge to nowhere."

In the nationally televised speech, she stood by McCain and said, "I've championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress. In fact, I told Congress thanks, but no thanks, on that bridge to nowhere. If our state wanted a bridge, I said, we'd build it ourselves."

However, as a candidate for governor in 2006, Palin had backed funding for the bridge. After her election, she killed the much-ridiculed project when it became clear the state had other priorities. She said she would use the federal funds to fill those needs.

This year she submitted to Congress a list of Alaska projects worth $197.8 million, including $2 million to research crab productivity in the Bering Sea and $7.4 million to improve runway lighting at eight Alaska airports. A spokesman said she cut the original list of 54 projects to 31.

"So while Sen. McCain was going after cutting earmarks in Washington," said Steve Ellis of Taxpayers for Common Sense, "Gov. Palin was going after getting earmarks."

http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-earmarks3-2008sep03,0,2482434.story
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/05/us/politics/05donate.html

September 5, 2008
At McCain’s Convention, Big Money Still Talks
By MICHAEL LUO

ST. PAUL — Of all the whales at the Republican National Convention this week, Robert Wood Johnson IV, the billionaire heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune and owner of the New York Jets, may be the biggest.

He wore a thick stack of credentials around his neck all week, providing access to many of the convention’s most exclusive sanctums. He shared a skybox at the Xcel Energy Center with Rick Davis, the manager of Senator John McCain’s presidential campaign. More significantly, he was the only top fund-raiser with his name emblazoned on his own hospitality suite, the “Woody Johnson Minneapolis-St. Paul 2008 Host Committee Private Lounge.”

Mr. Johnson’s exalted status here shows that for all of Mr. McCain’s efforts to purge the influence of money in politics, the big donors still wielded sizable influence over this convention, getting singular access to the campaign and shaping the endless chain of parties and events outside the convention hall.

The power brokers from the McCain campaign lavished Mr. Johnson and others like him with attention here — his itinerary was a parade of posh receptions for V.I.P. donors. Before the convention ramped up Tuesday evening, Mr. Johnson, 61, was among a cluster of McCain campaign officials and supporters hovering outside a suite guarded by an aide. As Carly Fiorina, the former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard and senior McCain adviser, chatted in one small circle, Mr. Johnson, 61, was at the center of another next to her, before he disappeared inside the suite with Mr. Davis.

Mr. Johnson has long been a player in Republican politics — he was a Bush Ranger in 2000 and 2004, raising more than $200,000 in each election. He has personally given more than $1 million to Republican candidates and committees over the years.

But this year, he emerged as perhaps the party’s most coveted donor. In May, after turning his office into a war room for more than a month and making sometimes 50 calls a day, he orchestrated a fund-raiser in New York City that brought in $7 million in a single evening for Mr. McCain, by far the largest amount collected up to that point by a campaign that had been struggling to raise money.

More recently, Mr. Johnson rode to the rescue of the Minneapolis-St. Paul convention host committee, helping it close a more than $10 million budget shortfall in a matter of weeks by writing a sizable check himself, getting his mother, who hails from Minneapolis, to do so as well, but also soliciting a slew of large contributions from his circle of wealthy friends.

“What we needed was somebody from the outside who through the Republican infrastructure had connections that we don’t necessarily have here in Minnesota,” said Jeff Larson, chief executive of the convention’s host committee.

Campaign finance watchdogs have long criticized how individuals and corporations, many with interests in Washington, can make unlimited donations to political conventions, in contrast to the caps on contributions to campaigns and parties, as a back-door way to curry favor with the parties and their candidates. But Mr. Johnson said he believes conventions are important and sees no reason to stanch the amount of private money flowing into them.

“I’m not a real believer in limits,” Mr. Johnson said.

Mr. Johnson rarely speaks at length with reporters. But in a series of conversations, he said that he is motivated by a belief in Senator John McCain and the democratic process.

“I only take on things I really believe in,” Mr. Johnson said.

But Mr. Johnson also clearly has his own agenda. Staffers on Capitol Hill credit him with playing a pivotal role in 2002 in pushing members of Congress, including House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, to allocate $750 million over five years for juvenile diabetes research. Mr. Johnson’s oldest daughter, Casey, has Type 1 diabetes and he has given millions to the search for a cure.

“We sat down and talked a couple times,” said Mr. Hastert, who added that the pair bonded over football. “He made a very good case that by investing U.S. dollars, we could actually save money.”

Mr. Johnson, who has another daughter with the autoimmune disease lupus and raised millions for that cause, also met with President Bush in the White House to push for embryonic stem-cell research, a meeting Mr. Johnson believes might have helped Bush to compromise in his policy and still allow federal financing for research on existing stem-cell lines.

As owner of the Jets and in search of a new stadium for his team over the last several years, Mr. Johnson’s political clout has certainly not hurt him, even if his quest to build a stadium in Manhattan ultimately fell short. He is candid about the need to make contributions to New York and New Jersey Democrats as well, given his business interests in the region.

The Jets and the Giants are building a new $800 million stadium together in New Jersey, but some critics have questioned the wisdom of the state taking on more than $100 million in debt as part of the deal.

Like other major donors, Mr. Johnson has traveled with Mr. McCain on the campaign trail. Mr. McCain also calls him on occasion to thank him. But Mr. Johnson downplays the access he has, saying he is no different from anyone else.

“You can call the senator too,” Mr. Johnson said.

At a cocktail reception on Tuesday put on by the Minnesota Vikings, Mr. Johnson hobnobbed with Mr. Hastert, who now works for a lobbying firm, and Senator Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah.

On Wednesday night, inside the convention hall, Mr. Johnson’s suite drew such Republican luminaries as former Senator Fred D. Thompson of Tennessee; Charlie Black, a senior McCain adviser; and former Senator Alfonse M. D’Amato of New York.

Mr. Johnson’s easygoing manner makes him popular among his fellow bundlers. On a hunting trip in Texas for Bush Rangers, he once brought with him an elephant gun he had used to hunt game in Africa and challenged others to see if they could handle its powerful recoil. These days, many ask him about his new quarterback, Brett Favre. What makes Mr. Johnson so effective as a fund-raiser, according to those around him, is his willingness to engage in the hard slog of making hundreds of calls.

“To raise seven figures the way Woody has done for an event and to get other folks to do it, you have to have a lot of conversations,” said Larry Bathgate, a top McCain fund-raiser who has known Mr. Johnson for two decades.

When Mr. Johnson was putting together his New York event in the spring, he removed the paintings from his office wall and taped up more than a hundred pieces of paper with the names of people he was hoping to convince to raise $100,000 each, or failing that, $25,000, marking his progress after each call.

The list included a Who’s Who of wealth and power in New York, from Donald Trump, a close personal friend, to David H. Koch, the billionaire co-owner of Koch Industries, the oil and gas conglomerate.

When Mr. Johnson’s staff was considering whom to call, someone suggested Charles F. Dolan, the chairman of Cablevision, and Mr. Johnson’s bitter foe in the stadium fight. Mr. Johnson quickly agreed and eventually secured what he described as a generous commitment.

“Anything for John McCain,” Mr. Johnson said.

jag
 
Four-strand pearl necklace: more than I make in a year doing physical work.

And how, exactly, am I supposed to identify with these people?
 
Being an elitist, IMO, has nothing to do with the money you make, or the money your family has. It has to do with how you speak too, and about people.

I have parts of my family that have a hell of alot of money. They are no more out of touch with "who I am" than I am out of touch with "who they are".....

WTF, cares?????
 
"Idiots for McCain"

idjuthc0.png


I faced palmed the hell out of myself when I saw this idiot. MSNBC showed him not 20 seconds after McSame called for adult literacy.
 
Money is Money.
its has no bearing on who you are.

I kid you not, we have a friend that won 120 million in the lotto.
She calls us all the time.
She now have a 1 million dollar house.
Jewelry to boot.

She is still the same person, with the one exception...she actually can but a few things she didnt have before. She still volunteers for the USO and for a pet shelter.
(she did that before)

Hell, I would have a 20,000 suit if I had the money...I dont THINK money would change me that much, but since I dont have it, I will never know.

Get off the money issue.
Cindy has done alot of good.

Offhand, she looks MUCH better with her hair down, then up.
 
I was really impressed with Cindy McCain's bio video.

I never knew that she has done so much humanitarian work around the world. :up:
 
I was really impressed with Cindy McCain's bio video.

I never knew that she has done so much humanitarian work around the world. :up:

Yeah, but liberals would rather complain about what clothing she wore to the RNC, and gripe about her wealth. Funny how they completely ignore Obama's wealth, though. The McCains rescued two children and adopted them as their own, yet Obama can't or won't even rescue his own brother from unbelievable poverty ... and his supporters don't say a word. Could you imagine if McCain had a brother living in absolute poverty in another country, who openly expressed that he wants to be brothers, but who was left there to rot? Liberals would be UP IN ARMS.

I'm beginning to understand what McCain said when he stated that the dems 'just don't get it.'
 
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