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McBush says he is using ex-cons to staff his campaign... and that we are winning the war

Written by: Timothy Horrigan on Jul 22, 2008 10:26 PM EDT

Linked to groups: Rockingham/Strafford DFA

Linked to campaigns: Obama for America

John McCain said today (Tuesday July 22, 2008) that most of his paid campaign workers were ex-cons on work release. 

This is not true: he was just joking (in response to a statement by a local supporter who was disappointed that the paid staffers weren't doing much for the campaign.)  His staffers are the usual mixture of college kids and older true believers.

That was not the only thing he said which was totally untrue.  He also said that we are winning the war in Iraq, that the “surge” had been a success, and that Iraqis in Basra and Kirkuk were already leading normal lives.


I wasn't planning on actually going inside John McCain's Town Hall meeting at the Rochester Opera House on Tuesday, July 22.  Strangely, I was invited: someone called me from a boiler room ostensibly at McCain's national headquarters (according to my Caller ID which read 1-703-418-2008), and I did RSVP.  I wasn't intending to actually show up.  I had no idea why they called me. I am pretty sure I did sign up with his web site last year to receive info about his campaign, but he hadn't sent me any in a long time.  Moreover, I am (as their voter lists probably indicate) a staunch Democrat (so staunch I am even running for the NH state legislature.)

While wandering around with some anti-McCain signs left over from a MoveOn.org event, I ran into some activist friends of mine who were waiting near the end of the line. There was a rumor going up and down that McCain might announce his Vice Presidential choice today, right here in Rochester.  I joked that he was going to choose Jeb Bradley (an extraordinarily mediocre ex-Congressman who is trying to win back his seat and who was working the line, alongside his primary opponent John Stephen and an independent named Peter Bearse.)

The campaign didn't allow my signs into the venue (but I had stashed mine in the car.)  This is a form of censorship, which is unfortunate given that the event was happening on  public property.  (The Rochester Opera House is part of the City Hall.)   This type of censorship is standard operating procedure for both parties: in fact one of the people I came in with was a stalwart local peace activist named Barbara Hilton, who was detained in 2007 at a Hillary Clinton rally in Portsmouth for refusing to hand over some antiwar signs.  Barbara became the star of this McCain town meeting, but I will get back to her in a few paragraphs.

Even though they confiscated signs at the door, the McCain campaign handed out fake home-made signs inside the auditorium.  There were only a dozen or so signs and they were all made by the same person.  They may have even been printed.  Some of the slogans were jabs at Obama, but subtle ones, such as “McCain: Change for the Better” or “Republican Pride: McCain.”  (The second slogan alludes to Michelle Obama's widely miscontrued statement about how she never felt really proud of America till her husband ran for President.)

The audience was not that big: some of the 500 or so seats in the auditorium were empty.  It was a good venue for the event; an lovingly-restored 19th century auditorium with rows of wooden seats on the floor, and more in a U-shaped balcony.  There were some murals of topless nymphs flanking the proscenium, but these were discreet enough and in any case perhaps their presence gave the impression that McCain was not a rigidly puritanical Republican.  Oddly, several of the citizens seated on the stage had liberal T shirts on.  McCain had about half a dozen red-clad members of DividedWeFail.org up there and his handlers even allowed a woman in a purple Health Care Voter T shirt to sit in the front row.  (DividedWeFail.org actually got some time to speak at the event.  This is  a joint venture of the AARP, the National Federation of Independent Business, and the Service Emplotees International Union, is a group which is doing something, it is not clear what exactly, about increasing access to health insurance.)

The introductions were given by two of the members of a (tiny) group called “Democrats for McCain.”  I wonder in retrospect that perhaps the McCain campaign was consciously recruiting Democrats to appear at the event.  Rochester is the largest city in Strafford County, which is the most solidly Democratic county in the state, and perhaps there aren't even enough Republicans left in the vicinity to fill up the hall. 

The second intro ran very long: the speaker was a UNH biology professor named Bill Congdon who rambled on so long they started playing the intro music while he was still talking.  A petite but distinguished-looking white-haired gentleman in a black suit ambled casually into the stage behind Congdon and waited his turn to speak.  This was Senator McCain.  (I worried that a biology professor supporting a Republican Presidential candidate in 2008, when many Republicans support Creation Pseudoscience, might be painting himself into a corner.  However, neither McCain nor Dr. Congdon took a position at this event on the Theory of Evolution.)

Mc Cain opened by saying the government has to stop spending “your money” on “bridges to nowhere” and he oddly also came out against agricultural subsidies.  He is, however, in favor of spening our money on the War in Iraq.  He reminds us many times that the surge is working... things are now supposedly no worse than they were in 2004.  He claims many times that Obama is in favor of defeat whereas McCain will only send our troops home in “Honor and Victory.”

On the issue of energy, he wants to build more nuclear power plants.  He reminded us liberal that the French get 80% of their electricity from nukes, and they build plants in just five years, rather than 10 to 15 years in the United States.  He proposed 45 new nukes by 2030.   (He didn't mention that no new nuclear plants have been built in the United States in more than 15 years.)  He wants more offshore srilling.  And he wants to have a gas tax “holiday” where the federal gas tax (which is only 18 cents a gallon) would be lifted for a while.  He claimed that this 18 cents per gallon would keep a trucker he met the day before in Maine in business.  (Of course if the holiday went on too long, the nation's highway network would fall apart, since the gas tax is the main funding source for federal highway aid— and without roads to drive on, the trucker would be out of a job again.)

McCain's healthcare plans was vague, and he mostly talked about what he would do for veterans.  He wants to have a GAP card (Government Assistance Plan) for veterans who don't have access to VA facilities and who lack private health insurance.  The subject of the VA was a contentious one... and that may explain why he gave Barbara Hilton so much time.

Her basic point was that the war is illegal and immoral and was started so we could steal the Iraqis' oil.  The Senator frowned at first but listened respectfully and shushed the crowd when they started booing.  He kept the dialog going with her for quite a long time: she got to aks two followup questions and he gave her  more than 10 minutes out of an hour-long event.  He disagreed politely with her, although he did admit (without ever mentioning President Bush's name) that the war was “badly mishandled for four years.”  (Presumably he meant 2003 through 2007: his story is basically that everything has been hunkydory since General Petraeus took over and we had our Surge.)  McCain claimed he couldn't withdraw our troops until Victory had been won, although he refused to say exactly what it is we are trying to win.  It was a good dialog, although he told one highly improbable lie, which is that millions of Iraqis are leading normal lives in cities like Basra and Kirkuk.  He proposes a strategy of “Clear, Hold and Build,” and presumably, when we reach the light at the end of the tunnel, we will have won the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people.

(That was a snarky reference to Vietnam, the war where he served our country with honor, losing six years of his life in a POW camp, and suffering injuries whose effects are clearly visible today.  I feel a little bad being so  snarky, so I will just point out that I am thankful for his service— but I will say that as a nation we actually dishonored his service for keeping his war going for at almost a decade past the point of dimnishing returns.  The high point of the American invasion of Vietnam came around 1966 or 1967, and it was all downhill after that, but we didn't start leaving till 1973, and we didn't get out for good until 1975. )

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Location: Rochester, NH 03867

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- Howard

By Mz*Little on Jul 23, 2008 12:46 PM EDT
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- All true--and well-written besides.

By Monica Smith on Jul 23, 2008 1:34 PM EDT

I do hope this blog learns how to count again. It tells me that there are three comments, but I only see one.

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By * rdorgan on Jul 23, 2008 1:30 PM EDT

Monica -

There was three (before) you posted -- three by Mz*Little -- with the 2nd and 3rd simply blank with just her chicken-in-pocket icon.

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- OK, so if blank posts are now going to get removed,

By Monica Smith on Jul 23, 2008 1:44 PM EDT

I'd suggest that there are some people who don't have enough to do.

How about writing up a protocol about how DFA thinks this blog ought to be used?

How about sending out emails to all members and asking them to check or update their passwords?

Just wait, I'll think of more......

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-

By Annilow on Jul 23, 2008 2:12 PM EDT

They must be REALLY HARD UP if they have time to troll rate long time BFAers.

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- Had forgotten the "joke" about the staff

By Monica Smith on Jul 23, 2008 1:38 PM EDT

and then there was one about a woman, too, which set me off at the time. 

McCain's humor is invariably mean-spirited.  I can't imagine that competent people put up with that kind of treatment.  His executive manners really are the pits.

The complaints from volunteers about an incompetent staff were quite specific and his promise to look into it didn't seem sincere or likely to make an improvement.

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By * rdorgan on Jul 23, 2008 1:36 PM EDT

His executive manners really are the pits.

+++

Indeed.

If McCain's campaign, so far, can be deemed to be executive experience, than my God, he needs a golden parachute out as CEO of his own campaign (his campaign IMO seems really disorganized).

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- Another reason why I think he's just a

By Monica Smith on Jul 23, 2008 1:52 PM EDT

stalking horse.

Or, maybe, like the legislators here in NewHampshire who have decided that a Democratic legislature is too much like work, Republicans are just going through the motions.

While it seems reasonable to blame the corporations for writing bills, preparing testimony and cycling junior executives through the congressional committees, it's actually possible that our Republican legislators' laziness prompted this response.

There really ought to be an addendum to "we will cut your taxes" that admits "then we won't have anything to do but look good for photo ops and let ourselves be wined and dined."

In years gone by these fellows entertained each other by complaining about the wife's new hat.  You do recall Jackie's pill-box hats, right?

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- photo shoot of McCain

By Phil Specht on Jul 23, 2008 1:50 PM EDT
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- have you heard that McCain is running ? ...

By * rdorgan on Jul 23, 2008 1:53 PM EDT

... from the media ?:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/07/23/mccain-on-the-run-cancels_n_114539.html

rachelwe@huffingtonpost.com | HuffPost Reporting From DC

McCain On The Run: Cancels Press Availability


July 23, 2008 12:56 PM

Marc Ambinder reports that John McCain's one press conference of the week has been abruptly canceled:

The one scheduled McCain press conference of the week has just been canceled, we are told. No word as to why. Grumble, grumble.

 


Why? Scheduling. Which is like answering "food" to "what did you eat for breakfast."

Ambinder offers a relatively innocuous explanation:

My bet is that the campaign much prefers local and regional interviews. Us national press folks will ask qualitatively different questions -- McCain v. the press, McCain v. history, McCain v. Obamania... The priority here in northern Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional district is on getting good local news coverage.

But Ben Smith sees more, pointing out that Obamania is the least of McCain's worries right now:

Despite the press crowd around Obama, McCain's avail today was the one with more promise to make news:

He hasn't explained what he meant by juggling the timeline on the surge and Awakening (though his staff did the best salvage job possible); whether he meant that Obama was deliberately selling out the country; whether he shares his campaign's grievance with the press; or what he thinks of his staff's genocide-themed attack.

...
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- Ha ha

By Tom Bearse on Jul 23, 2008 2:17 PM EDT

McCain remains the straight talking candidate as long as he's keeping his mouth shut.

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- I can't Reply ...

By * rdorgan on Jul 23, 2008 2:19 PM EDT
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- sorry about that folks,

By Mz*Little on Jul 23, 2008 2:38 PM EDT

Am at work and got called away before i could go back and tell the other thread.  My bad.

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- cross references

By Susan Rowe on Jul 24, 2008 7:13 AM EDT

http://democracyforamerica.com/watercooler/1216861200
http://democracyforamerica.com/watercooler/1216872000
http://democracyforamerica.com/watercooler/1216828800

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- cross references

By Susan Rowe on Jul 24, 2008 7:21 AM EDT

http://democracyforamerica.com/groups/32-democracy-for-america-miami-dade-dfam/blog_posts/26047-open-thread
http://democracyforamerica.com/groups/32-democracy-for-america-miami-dade-dfam/blog_posts/26034-open-thread

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