March 30, 2008 5:37 pm ET
SUMMARY: Discussing Howard Dean's assertion that Sen. John McCain is a "blatant opportunist," on Fox News Sunday, host Chris Wallace stated, "I think you can call John McCain a lot of things. Opportunist?" Bill Kristol responded that polls on the Iraq war show "that most people would like to be told, 'Hey, we can get out of there soon, no problem, no damage,' " and added: "I think the opportunist line is just ludicrous." The Chicago Tribune's Jill Zuckman asserted: "McCain actually revels in saying the thing that you don't want to hear. And he says it first." No member of the Fox News Sunday panel mentioned that McCain has reversed his positions on issues such as taxes, immigration, and his view of the religious right to align himself more closely with the base of his party.
On the March 30 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co's Fox News Sunday, host Chris Wallace highlighted Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean's March 28 assertion that Sen. John McCain is "a blatant opportunist." Turning to New York Times columnist and Weekly Standard editor William Kristol, Wallace stated, "I think you can call John McCain a lot of things. Opportunist?" Kristol responded that polls on the Iraq war show "that most people would like to be told, 'Hey, we can get out of there soon, no problem, no damage,' " and added: "I think the opportunist line is just ludicrous." After Kristol spoke, the Chicago Tribune's Jill Zuckman asserted: "McCain actually revels in saying the thing that you don't want to hear. And he says it first." In fact, McCain has reversed his positions on issues such as taxes, immigration, and his view of the religious right to align himself more closely with the base of his party, something that no member of the panel -- which also included Fox News host Brit Hume and National Public Radio senior correspondent Juan Williams -- noted while discussing Dean's statement.
Media Matters has previously documented McCain's reversals on tax cuts, immigration, and his views of the religious right:
During his presidential campaign, McCain has repeatedly claimed that he initially opposed the Bush tax cuts because they were not offset by spending cuts. But that was not the reason he gave in his May 2001 floor statement explaining his opposition to the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 conference committee report -- the final version of Bush's initial tax-cut package. In that floor statement, McCain said that while he supported an earlier version of the bill "that provided more tax relief to middle income Americans," he could not "in good conscience support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits go to the most fortunate among us, at the expense of middle class Americans who most need tax relief."
Moreover, during CNN's January 30 Republican presidential debate, McCain asserted that he "would not" support his own comprehensive immigration proposal, which would have established a guest-worker program and a path to citizenship, if it came to a vote on the Senate floor. McCain acknowledged during that debate that he currently favors "border security first" because "[t]he people want the border secured first."
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.
From the March 30 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co's Fox News Sunday:
WALLACE: Bill, the Democrats are taking their own shots. They reacted very sharply to that ad. They say McCain, this is a -- party chairman Howard Dean said McCain may try to reintroduce himself to the country, but, and let's put it up, he, McCain, is "a blatant opportunist who doesn't understand the economy and is promising to keep our troops in Iraq for 100 years." I got to say, Bill, I think you can call John McCain a lot of things. Opportunist?
KRISTOL: Well, I think supporting the surge in Iraq and saying we might have to stay there for a long time, is that opportunistic? I think it's kind of the opposite. Don't the polls show that most people would like to be told, "Hey, we can get out of there soon, no problem, no damage"? McCain has shown real courage, obviously, in supporting the surge, and I think he will show courage incidentally over the next few weeks. As Brit said, we've got to win this showdown here with the Iranian-backed militias. If it means slowing down or stopping the drawdown of troops, I believe McCain will call for that. And I think he will say we've got to win and we can't have some artificial -- it's better to win with 18 brigades in Iraq than to lose -- to risk losing by drawing down too fast to 15. So, the opportunist line is just ludicrous, and I don't think that hurts McCain at all.
ZUCKMAN: McCain actually revels in saying the thing that you don't want to hear. And he says it first. He -- in fact, when he gave the economic speech this week, he almost didn't really acknowledge people's pain, as Bill Clinton taught us you have to do, before going right to saying, I'm not going to give away the store.
&mdash L.K.A.
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