February 14, 2008 4:47 pm ET
SUMMARY: A Washington Times headline claimed in reference to Sen. John McCain: "McCain refuses to pander." In fact, The Washington Times itself has reported on McCain's efforts to satisfy conservative Republicans by changing his positions on issues such as taxes and immigration.
A February 14 Washington Times headline, featured above the fold on the front page of the newspaper, claimed in reference to Sen. John McCain (R-AZ): "McCain refuses to pander." In fact, The Washington Times itself has reported on McCain's efforts to satisfy conservative Republicans by changing his positions on issues such as taxes and immigration. In an October 31, 2007, article headlined "McCain caters to GOP voters," the Times' Stephen Dinan, who also wrote the February 14 article accompanying the headline "McCain refuses to pander," reported: "Sen. John McCain has quietly been piling up flip-flops, including ditching his long-held support for the Law of the Sea convention and telling bloggers he now opposes the DREAM Act to legalize illegal alien students. ... Republican primary voters tilt to the right, and the sea treaty is another example of Mr. McCain veering to try to align himself with them, recanting positions along the way on immigration, tax cuts and campaign-finance reform."
The February 14 headline was also highlighted by the blogs Think Progress and the The Carpetbagger Report, both of which offered several examples of what they cited as McCain's pandering.
In the article accompanying the headline, Dinan reported: "John McCain's campaign manager yesterday said the candidate will not pander for conservative support, even as his surrogates have made a second overture to see why chief competitor Mike Huckabee has not dropped out of the Republican presidential race." Dinan added that McCain campaign manager Rick Davis "disputed the sentiment from some conservatives that Mr. McCain needs to make a specific gesture to conservatives, such as selecting a vice-presidential nominee they can be excited about, to win their support." Dinan went on to note that following his victories in the Maryland, Virginia, and District of Columbia primaries on February 12, McCain "did send out an e-mail ad through Human Events, the conservative weekly newspaper, titled 'We must unite as a party,' pleading for financial support. 'I cannot succeed in this endeavor without the support of dedicated conservatives like you. And today, I write to ask for your support,' he wrote."
Media Matters for America has documented several instances in which McCain has changed his positions to satisfy conservative Republicans:
Additionally, McCain admitted that during the 2000 South Carolina primary, he pandered to Republican primary voters by failing to take a consistent position on whether the Confederate flag should fly atop South Carolina's Capitol dome. As reported in an April 20, 2000, New York Times article, McCain said that the flag was a "symbol of racism and slavery" but on the very next day called it a "symbol of heritage."
Indeed, in an April 20, 2000, speech, McCain stated that he had "compromise[d]" his "principles" in his statements on the flag:
McCAIN: My ancestors fought for the Confederacy, and I am sure that many, maybe all of them, fought with courage and with faith that they were serving a cause greater than themselves. But I don't believe their service, however distinguished, needs to be commemorated in a way that offends, that deeply hurts, people whose ancestors were once denied their freedom by my ancestors.
[...]
McCAIN: As I admitted, I should have done this earlier, when an honest answer could have affected me personally. I did not do so for one reason alone. I feared that if I answered honestly, I could not win the South Carolina primary. So, I chose to compromise my principles. I broke my promise to always tell the truth.
&mdash S.P.
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