McCain's Glass House Issue 1 is GOP presidential politics, including John McCain's FCC letter and Bush's tax-cut plan. Issue 2 is Democratic presidential politics, including Al Gore and Bill Bradley's promise to allow open gays in the military. Most pundits agree that the revelation of John McCain's influence-peddling letter to the FCC has hurt his campaign, although several--including Paul Gigot (PBS's NewsHour With Jim Lehrer ) and Tucker Carlson (CNN's Late Edition )--think that McCain is just defending his constituents, as he was elected to do. Pundits disagree on Bush's sweeping tax-cut proposal. Joe Klein (NBC's Meet the Press ) notes that the cut is bigger than the congressional GOP's (doomed) proposal last fall, and Al Hunt (CNN's Capital Gang ) and David Broder (PBS's Washington Week in Review ) think that New Hampshire voters care more about schools and health care than taxes. Mark Shields ( NewsHour ) remarks that Jack Kemp's aggressive tax-cutting campaign strategy didn't work in the 1988 GOP primary, but his colleague, Gigot, responds that McCain's emphasis on tax-cut moderation apes the failed electoral strategies of George Bush (in 1980) and Bob Dole (in 1988). On Meet the Press , Rep. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a McCain supporter, thinks that McCain's critique that Bush's tax plan as too large is not working. John McLaughlin, Lawrence Kudlow, and Jim Warren (all of PBS's McLaughlin Group ) enthuse over Bush's recent debate performances. Many pundits--including Mara Liasson ( Washington Week ), Mark Shields ( NewsHour and Capital Gang ), Sam Donaldson (ABC's This Week ), and Paul Begala (MSNBC coverage of Friday's night's GOP debate)--think that Gore's and Bradley's outspoken advocacy of gays in the military will hurt them in the general election. Paul Gigot ( NewsHour ) and Steve Roberts ( Late Edition ) contrast Gore's ideological approach to this issue with President Clinton's pragmatic approach. Tucker Carlson ( Late Edition ) notes that only a nation with no security threats could devote so much attention to a "boutique issue" like the military's homosexual policy. George Stephanopoulos and George F. Will (both of This Week ) think the issue is a red herring, because Congress can override any executive order that overturns "don't ask, don't tell." Margaret Carlson ( Capital Gang ) and Joe Klein say that Bradley's aloofness and condescension still hurt his popularity, and Klein predicts that if he is the Democratic nominee his Senate votes against the Gulf War and welfare reform will haunt him. Miscellany: John McLaughlin, Jim Warren, and Eleanor Clift (of the McLaughlin Group ) call the new criterion for participating in general-election presidential debates "undemocratic." (A participant must have at least 15 percent support in five national polls.) They argue that any party qualifying for federal matching funds should get to participate. On Fox News Sunday , Bill Bradley also voices disagreement with the rule, saying that the Reform Party has a "strong case" that it should be included in the debates, even without 15 percent support. On CBS's Face the Nation , Gov. Jesse Ventura, Ref.-Minn., notes that he had only 10 percent support when he debated Minnesota's Democratic and Republican candidates for governor; six weeks later he won the election with 37 percent. ... On Friday's Larry King Live (CNN), both Bob and Elizabeth Dole say that the general election will be close, not a blowout by Bush. Appearing with his wife again on This Week , Bob Dole predicts that Bush will win the nomination (although he still will not endorse him). Steve Roberts opines that although Mrs. Dole has proved to be an awful presidential campaigner, her popularity among women will be hard for Bush to resist when he selects his running mate. ... When Elizabeth Dole praises Bush's "executive experience" on This Week , Sam Donaldson points out that her own husband had no such experience when he ran for president. Last Word Look, I've always had two principles. One is make bureaucracies react on behalf of the taxpayers, and second, do whatever I can to increase competition and lower costs in telecommunications. Those are the guiding principles I've had. Today, we are asking the federal government to release all correspondence that I've had with every government agency. But finally, let me remind you, I'm the chairman of the committee that is designated by the Congress to oversight [sic] the FCC. And it's my responsibility to try to see and make them act. And so I believe that the record will be clear that I've done that on behalf of the consumer. --John McCain ( Face the Nation )