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Monday, November 10, 2008
Michelle Bernard :: Townhall.com Columnist
Senator John McCain: Continuing to Serve America With Honor
by Michelle Bernard
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Senator Barack Obama will be our next president. He is the man of the hour, the focus of attention in America and around the world. Almost entirely forgotten is Senator John McCain. But Senator McCain, though the loser in the vote on November 4, remains a winner. He won’t be president, but his worthy service to the nation will continue.

We all know Senator McCain’s biography. A naval officer in a line of naval officers. A prisoner of war who suffered greatly for his country. A member of Congress and the Senate with a reputation for straight talk. To that he has added an honorable presidential campaign conducted against great odds.

Senator McCain decided to run in an election stacked against any Republican. Last year, he was given up for politically dead. Rather than get out, as recommended by the “punditocracy” he fought back. And he won. Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani capitalized on his handling of 9/11 in New York City. Governor Mitt Romney spent tens of millions of dollars of his own money. Governor Mike Huckabee energized social conservatives. But Senator McCain beat them all.

Still, the general election was a long-shot for any Republican. Senator Obama was a media darling and political phenomenon. The GOP was outgunned financially. President George W. Bush was the most unpopular president since polling began. But Senator McCain did not give up. Instead, he surprised everyone by knocking on our so-called political glass ceiling by choosing Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate. This one act rejuvenated his campaign, giving him a lead in the polls after the Republican convention.

Caught at a disadvantage with the implosion of Wall Street, Senator McCain nevertheless refused to stoop to gutter politics. He ruled out attacking Senator Obama based on his connection to Reverend Jeremiah Wright. He decreed that there would be no attacks on Michelle Obama. Senator McCain refused to allow ads attacking Senator Obama for not serving in the military. His campaign killed proposed ads attacking Obama for being soft on crime (a la Willie Horton), using children to question Obama’s willingness to fight terrorism, and showing the “celebrity” Obama dancing with a very white Ellen DeGeneres. Nor did Senator McCain ever play the anti-Muslim or anti-race card.

Senator McCain even made a genuine, if ultimately hopeless, pitch for votes from African-Americans. He spoke at both the NAACP and Urban League conventions and, on a special trip to Memphis, where Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered, apologized for voting against making Dr. King’s birthday a holiday.

In his campaign, like the rest of his career, Senator McCain put his country first.

Now John McCain will return to the Senate, where he has much to do. With its ranks badly depleted, the Senate GOP caucus needs tough yet principled leadership. Senator McCain can be a moral, if not the formal, Republican leader. Continued...

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About The Author
Michelle D. Bernard, a lawyer by training, is the president and CEO of the Independent Women’s Forum and author of Women’s Progress, How Women are Wealthier, Healthier, and More Independent Than Ever Before.
 
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Phil Byler, my freind, rebuttle time
(1) the financial meltdown.
I know that McCain warned about freddie and fannie but how much did he work with his fellow republicans on sounding the clarion call.

(2)the bailout
"I'm suspending my campaign" how many campaigns have been suspended, and while suspending a campaign you so blatantly suspend your partys princicples

(3) the unpopularity of George W. Bush
Do you suppose it might have helped if one of the most senior members of the senate spent a little more time promoting Bush instead of reaching across the aisle working on his own maverick persona?

4 media bias certainly no argument there, but its definately workable if you can define yourself as clearly different from the opposition which you stated he had been doing before the meltdown bailout fiasco. which then again blurred the line between the candidates.

5 ton of money = flawed campaign finance reform
which limits yourself while enhancing the opponent ( a direct result of McCains maverick)

McCain has demonstrated great qualities and lived a good life.
His inability to deliniate himself from someone on the opposing political team is lacking. There is also something wrong with the way his actions always seem to deminish those on his team while he tries to work across the aisle.

Thanks for you service McCain may your retirement be long and fruitful.

SJ Doc, just having a little fun
at your expense... Sorry, can't help myself...


Seriously, my impression is that you could best be described as a "hard-core libertarian".

My "anarchist" comment comes from when you said you're partial to the Agorist philosophy.


Yes, like you I believe in the bill of rights - I'm a constitutionalist.



=====
"come see the violence inherent in the system! You saw him repressing me, didn't you"

-- Chapman et al
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