Halloween, Schmalloween. Sorry, but that’s how I feel. I don’t mind the little kids
candyhandling – hey, a kid’s gotta
eat. I just don’t want to have to dress
up myself. (The one time I actually felt
comfortable in my costume, the last time I did this decades ago, I wore a tuxedo
with a pig mask and a dollar-sign on the snout.
Capitalist pig.
Very nice.)
The following is either six years late or two years early, but I’m
up in Maine,
in serious risk of frost bite, and, frankly, it’s all I got. Plus, at least this is a week most people are
thinking about politics, so here goes:
JOHN McCAIN – FYI
Few who know the Senator fail to admire him. We share an editor who tells me he is a great
guy and I don’t doubt it. I once tried
to see for myself by bidding $10,000 on “lunch in the Senate dining room with
John McCain” at a charity event. I was
outbid, so I have to just take my editor’s word for it.
That said, the Senator is – to his credit
or detriment – a conservative. From Time,
during the 2000 primary:
Bush went after McCain's reform credentials last week, pointing
out that as Commerce chairman, McCain has been willing to milk the system he
rails against. "The portrait McCain likes is the one of the plain-talking
crusader who's bucking the system," writes Charles Lewis of the Center for
Public Integrity in his book The Buying of the President 2000. "The one
many others see is that of a politician
who rarely breaks ranks with the special interests that finance his campaign."
Many of McCain's top fund raisers and advisers – Kenneth Duberstein, Vin Weber
– are lobbyists who do business with his committee. And as the Wall Street
Journal recently pointed out, McCain is more apt to rail against corporate
malfeasance than to sponsor legislation to rein it in. It's the reverse of Teddy Roosevelt's dictum – McCain speaks loudly and carries no stick. . . .
McCain's record makes the Bush strategy of calling him a Clinton clone seem
foolish. In the Senate, McCain has been
a rock-solid vote on just about every core G.O.P. issue, winning high ratings from the Christian Coalition
and other conservative groups. He supported every item in Newt Gingrich's
Contract with America
and voted to convict Bill Clinton on every article of impeachment. And his environmental record would make Teddy
Roosevelt cringe. McCain has voted many times to cut funding for
toxic-waste cleanups, he has supported subsidies for mining on public lands,
and he favors reopening national forest lands to logging. (In
1998 the League of Conservation Voters gave him a zero rating.) He is a
longtime friend of the National Rifle Association's, voting against the Brady
Bill in 1993 and the assault-weapons ban in 1994. He's against the licensing
and registration of handguns. He has repeatedly voted against minimum-wage increases and equal pay for women, and labor
considers him a reliable anti-union vote.
Bush allies in South
Carolina have been running TV spots questioning
McCain's commitment to the pro-life cause. Yet he took the pro-life position 82 times out of 86 votes cast in the
Senate.
This is all either good or bad, depending on your point of
view. Likewise, his standing against
most things that GLBT Americans wish he would support. His Human Rights Campaign ratings over the
past three Congresses have ranged from 14 to 33 out of a possible 100. (By way of comparison, conservative Democrat
Joe Lieberman – who surely knows the Old Testament labels homosexuality and the
eating of shellfish “abominations” – ranged from 88 to 100 over those same six
years.)
My own hope is that a Democrat will win in 2008, and have the good
sense to offer Senator McCain, who will then be 72 and out of a job if he
resigns to run for the Presidency, an important ambassadorship. Lord knows, he
deserves it and would represent our country with honor.
All hail our ambassador to the Court of St.
James.
Happy Halloween.