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