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Why the Press Loves John McCain
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John McCain isn't running in Iowa, and he may get clobbered in New
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Hampshire. But he's miles ahead in the very first contest of the 2000 campaign:
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the press primary. Journalists go weak in the knees around the guy. The few who
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have attempted to write debunking pieces about him have failed miserably. When
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I set out to spend a few days with McCain last week, I promised my editor that
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I wouldn't join in this collective swoon. That proved impossible. But perhaps I
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can redeem myself a bit by examining the phenomenon.
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Why do the hacks love McCain? You could start with our admiration for a
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quality not many of us possess: physical courage. But I think the deeper
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admiration is for the guts McCain showed in his Vietnamese captivity and which
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he's shown consistently ever since. Everyone knows by now the story told in
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McCain's book, how he voluntarily suffered five and a half years as a P.O.W. in
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Vietnam after refusing an early release. McCain wasn't just a war hero. He was
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a kind of spirit of resistance personified, a man who writes in his book (click
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here for a Ballot Box review) that he found freedom in captivity by
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tormenting his torturers, even at the cost of additional abuse. McCain is a
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Faulknerian character, in a very different sense than Bill Clinton is. And I
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think that at this point, even those of us who think Clinton has been a good
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president hunger for a successor more deserving of our respect.
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Reporters who have covered McCain in the Senate have seen Republican
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politics considerably enlivened by this defiant character. McCain is barely
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tolerated by his party's leadership, and he hardly conceals his contempt for
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Trent Lott and Mitch McConnell. He has broken with his colleagues over
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campaign-finance reform, over legislation to punish cigarette makers, and over
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corporate welfare. There's a bit of the "strange new respect" phenomenon in the
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way journalists respond to these positions. When a conservative politician
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takes liberal stands, he is often described as having "grown." Yet McCain
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remains a genuine conservative, the farthest to the right of any of the other
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plausible candidates in the race (a category that excludes the born-again Bible
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slinger Steve Forbes). Reporters respect McCain less because he takes liberal
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positions than because of the way he puts his beliefs ahead of his career as a
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matter of course.
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McCain has been conducting himself in the same delightfully subversive way
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as a candidate for the GOP nomination. There were two guys in the campaign
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brave enough or clueless enough to oppose ethanol subsidies beforehand. Both
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faced the unappealing prospect of having to run in the Iowa caucus with this
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millstone around their necks. One of those candidates, Bill Bradley, brazenly
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changed his position to favor tax breaks for ethanol. The other, John McCain
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decided not to run in the Iowa Caucuses rather than change his position--even
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though forgoing the first contest makes his uphill struggle that much steeper.
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"Every candidate that I've observed in a race, if winning is the only
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objective, they always end up doing something ," he told me. "They
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compromise in order to experience some real or imagined short-term political
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gain." McCain says this not with contempt, but with pity for those of his
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colleagues who cannot resist political temptation.
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Then there's the McCain charm. I doubt I'll enjoy any part of this 2000
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campaign so much as a couple of days spent as part of a three-person press
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corps traveling with McCain. He's funny, friendly, and far too candid for his
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own good. Most politicians go off the record when they want to state the
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obvious. McCain doesn't go off the record at all, at least in my experience. He
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behaves, in fact, more like a civilian talking about politics than a politician
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discussing politics. He does reverse spin: Unprompted, he tells me that his big
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announcement speech the previous day in South Carolina was something of a
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failure, describing himself as tired and his audience as merely "polite." And
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there aren't too many other senators, let alone presidential candidates, who
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will start a conversation (in the van, leaving the Reagan Library) with the
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line, "One of the many reasons I hate the French ..." (the reason related to a
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diplomatic insult to Warren Christopher when he was secretary of state.)
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McCain has said other things in recent weeks that would land another
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candidate in deep doo-doo. In a recent piece in U.S. News , Roger Simon
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quoted him referring to his North Vietnamese prison guards as "the goddamn
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gooks." Reporters usually either put such indiscretions off the record on
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McCain's behalf or congratulate him for making them. One reason for this is the
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media's sound instinct not to punish a politician for being exceptionally
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candid with the media. Another is the feeling that McCain has earned the right
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to say whatever he wants. For those who have watched his career, his
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outspokenness on the campaign trail appears as a refusal to be cowed by yet
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another prison and its silly rules. As Bob Dole once said about McCain, you
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spend five-and-a-half years in a box, you get to say whatever you want.
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He also responds to the press. Unlike the inaccessible George W. Bush, you
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can get to McCain easily, and have a frank, intelligent discussion with him
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about just about any topic. I've developed a minor obsession with how the
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various Republican education plans don't make sense even on their own terms.
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McCain's flawed plan, like
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Bush's even more flawed plan, wouldn't give vouchers a fair test, because
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it doesn't fund the voucher at anywhere near the cost of most private schools.
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And if a voucher won't pay for private school, it won't create any pressure on
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public schools to improve. I made this point to McCain on a flight from Grand
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Rapids, Mich., to the Reagan Library in California. His initial response was
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that while $2,000, the amount in his plan, wouldn't cover tuition at Sidwell
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Friends or Andover, it would pay for many Catholic parochial schools. "I'm
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unembarrassed to tell you that one of my happiest days of recent years was when
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my daughter was accepted in Catholic school," he said. "I know she'll get a
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quality education. She'll wear a uniform, and she'll be away from those little
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bastards that are trying to get their hands on her."
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McCain then called across the aisle of the plane to his wife. "Cindy, honey,
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good morning. How much is our tuition for Meghan at Xavier?" Meghan, 14, is the
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McCains' oldest daughter.
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"$6,100," Mrs. McCain answered. "Not including books or uniforms."
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McCain seemed surprised at how high it was. And the next thing I knew, he
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was running with my criticism, trashing his own proposal. "It's one thing to
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say we'll give everybody a choice," he said. "Well, if they can't get in, then
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we'd better either provide incentives for schools to come into being where they
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can afford it, or figure out a way to give them enough of a voucher where they
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can." You could say that McCain is to be faulted for not working out a better
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education proposal in the first place. But in a way, being able to profit from
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valid criticism is more important than being a master of policy detail. The
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Clinton health-care plan is a case in point.
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This points to a final press-friendly quality of McCain's: brilliant
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flattery. It's fairly unusual, in my experience, for a politician to accept a
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reporter's opinion that one of his major proposals is seriously flawed. It's
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also gratifying to the reporter. Bill Clinton is a master of buttering up
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journalists by quoting their books and articles back to them. But with Clinton,
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the effort at seduction is transparent. You know he really hates the press, and
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is forcing himself to try to win them over. When McCain flatters you, it
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doesn't feel automatic or calculated. He truly likes us journalists. It's his
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fellow senators he can't stand.
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