Raising McCain
Every
presidential candidate who does well enough to attract media scrutiny is doomed
to have a bad story written about him. Al Gore? A phony career politician. Bill
Bradley? A do-nothing lecturer. George W. Bush? A Clintonesque playboy. Now
John McCain faces the same ritual. Rather than resist it, McCain has turned it
to his advantage. He has chosen his own bad story: He's an angry Vietnam
veteran. It's an ingenious choice, a good story disguised as a bad one. It
advances McCain's campaign themes--integrity and fearless independence--while
sating reporters who imagine that their questions about his "temper" amount to
tough-minded scrutiny.
McCain's anger is supposed to be bad because he can't control it--and therefore
can't work with Congress and can't be trusted with nuclear weapons. To refute
this charge, all he has to do is restrain his temper in a few highly visible
situations. Journalists unwittingly oblige him. Bent on making news, they
bombard him with questions designed to provoke an explosion. "Why is it that
those who know you best seem to like you the least?" debate co-moderator Karen
Brown asked him at last week's debate in New Hampshire. Responding to such
questions, McCain always smiles, thanks his interrogators, praises his
opponents, and deflects the challenge with a self-mocking joke. "A comment like
that really makes me mad ," he quipped during the debate.
But
McCain understands that while voters want a president who can control his
temper, they also want one with a sense of outrage. He flaunts his anger at
HMOs, trial lawyers, agribusiness conglomerates, and defense contractors who
feed on "corporate welfare." "It's important to have passion and to get angry
when you see injustice," he argued on Larry King Live . On Face the
Nation , he boasted, "Sure, I get angry. I get angry at this last bill that
we just passed that [is] an outrageous waste of taxpayers' money." In the New
Hampshire debate, McCain vowed, "From time to time, those of us … who stand in
an independent fashion are going to break some china. … It is very clear to all
the lobbyists and the special influence people that run Washington now that if
John McCain is president of the United States, things are going to be a lot
different."
McCain's enemies make this spin an easy sell. Who's spreading the rumor that
he's too volatile to be president? Republican Senate leaders. Newsweek
supplies their motive--"Many senators despise [McCain] … for his crusade in
favor of campaign-finance reform"--and McCain's campaign manager affirms that
they're out to stop him because "John's shaken up the establishment by talking
about strong conservative reform." On Face the Nation , panelist Gloria
Borger asked McCain, "The entire Senate leadership [is] against you. … Is there
a sense, perhaps, that you are too much of a maverick to really become
president and govern?" Too much of a maverick? The question was practically a
campaign contribution.
In
particular, McCain asserts his anger on behalf of soldiers. This combines two
good stories: his principled outrage and his war record. "Do I feel
passionately about issues? Absolutely," he conceded in the debate. "When I see
… wasteful pork-barrel spending [while] we have 12,000 enlisted families--brave
men and women--on food stamps, yeah, I get angry." On Meet the Press ,
McCain defended a 1992 shouting match with a fellow senator over the fate of
Vietnam POWs. "I took strong exception to his allegations that somehow I was
ignoring important evidence," McCain explained. "We're talking about an issue
of literally life and death." Such patriotic outbursts have captivated the
media. McCain "is best when he is angry," swoons Time . "He blazes with
indignation that 12,000 military families are on food stamps."
McCain's cleverest strategy has been to associate the anger story with his POW
ordeal. This week, citing nasty rumors that his torture and imprisonment in
Vietnam had left him emotionally unbalanced, his campaign released medical
records indicating that he had never been mentally ill. The records did more
than kill a bad story. They revived a good one. McCain got to tour the TV
studios retelling his heroic saga. In every interview, he alluded to his
wounds, calling his medical records "an orthopedic surgeon's dream." The New
York Times discussed his "major fractures" and "solitary confinement." The
Associated Press recalled his 1973 testimony that he had survived through
"faith in country, [the Navy], family and God." NBC's David Bloom, recounting
how McCain had been "brutally and repeatedly tortured," quoted a commander who
said of McCain, "There was no tougher resister among POWs."
The
Vietnam angle doesn't just help McCain. It hurts Bush. When stories about
McCain's temper first began to circulate, McCain told reporters, "I guess the
memo from the Bush campaign has come out to attack John McCain." McCain has
since backed away grudgingly from that allegation ("I was speaking
metaphorically," he says), but his aides have kept it alive by publicly urging
the Bush campaign to make sure its agents aren't spreading the rumors. By
framing these rumors in the context of Vietnam, McCain's surrogates create the
impression that Bush, who joined the National Guard to avoid Vietnam, is using
McCain's war record against him.
There's no evidence to support this insinuation, but since Bush can't prove the
negative--that no one associated with his campaign has ever said any such
thing--the insinuation sticks. Front pages and Sunday political shows continue
to discuss the anti-McCain "whisper campaign," a phrase concocted by McCain's
aides. "It's going to be next to impossible to finger anyone in the Bush
campaign for fomenting anti-McCain sentiment," lamented Newsweek .
Vietnam veterans in the Senate called the trauma rumors "disgraceful." Pundits
called them "disgusting" and "despicable." A POW expert told NBC that those who
were spreading the rumors had "spit in the face of every Vietnam veteran."
Now
McCain is being asked whether he's angry about the rumors about his anger.
Again, he gets to impress everyone by turning the other cheek. "It doesn't
matter to me," he shrugged on Meet the Press . "We need to move forward."
When asked about reports that Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott had circulated
the rumors, McCain defended him: "Trent Lott has been a personal friend of mine
for many, many years." McCain has won the fight the best way--invisibly--by
framing the orientation of the questions. Everyone asks him about the "whisper
campaign" against him. No one asks him about the pro-McCain whisper campaign
about the "whisper campaign." Everyone expects Bush to halt the
anti-McCain whispers. No one expects McCain to halt the whispers that Bush is
behind the anti-McCain whispers.
Pundits can't believe McCain would fan and exploit rumors about his anger.
"Even if you handle it right, you still don't want this kind of thing out
there," argued Susan Estrich on Fox News Sunday . "There's some people
who only hear a piece of it and say to themselves, is something wrong with John
McCain?" Estrich misses the point. Voters are already asking whether
something is wrong with McCain. They approach a presidential candidate the way
a woman approaches a date. First, they want to know what's attractive about
him. Second, if he passes that test, they want to know what's wrong with him.
They won't be satisfied--and won't relax--until they've identified his flaws.
Third, they want to observe those flaws, examine them, discuss them, and figure
out whether they're manageable. Every candidate has many flaws, some of which
are worse than others. A candidate's best strategy, therefore, is to show the
media and the voters his most manageable flaw in the hope that they will focus
on that flaw and stop looking for others.
This
is precisely what the anger story has accomplished. By consuming the media, it
has overshadowed and smothered more dangerous anti-McCain stories. With few
exceptions, reporters aren't pressing McCain about his role in the Keating Five
campaign-finance scandal. They aren't asking him to explain to Republican
voters how his crusades for campaign-finance restrictions and a
half-trillion-dollar tobacco tax square with conservative principles. They
aren't asking him to explain to independents why he opposes the Brady Bill and
Roe vs. Wade . Reporters aren't trying to protect McCain; they just think
his mental stability is a more damaging issue. It "goes beyond accusing McCain
of hypocrisy" on campaign finance, says Newsweek . For McCain, this
illusion is felicitous. The anger story has distracted the media because it
looks so much worse than it is.
Above
all, the story of McCain's anger has obscured what his quarrels have been
about. By focusing attention on tone, it has deflected attention from content.
When reports about McCain's bad temper first emerged out of Arizona this fall,
they indicated that he had muscled, rebuked, punished, and cowed fellow
Republicans in order to squelch dissent. Those reports could have generated
discussion about whether McCain's tirades against entrenched power in
Washington are hypocritical. Instead, they have been reduced to discussion
about whether he is prone to tirades.
Likewise, Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has tried to focus scrutiny on McCain's
tobacco and campaign-finance crusades. "I don't think John McCain's personality
is the issue," McConnell pleaded on television two weeks ago. "For me, it's
been a policy difference" over "big taxes and [putting] the government in
charge of everybody's political speech." But the anger story has overwhelmed
McConnell's critique. Reporters aren't interested in the clash of ideas.
They're interested in the clash of personalities.
Is John McCain too crazy
to be president? The question answers itself. A man who can use that issue to
obscure his more serious weaknesses, underscore his strengths, and besmirch his
opponent can't be accused of showing too little rationality and discipline. The
better question is whether he has shown too much.