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Despite McCain's many hedges, Borger asserted that "[n]o one would accuse McCain of equivocating on anything"

October 30, 2006 7:38 pm ET

SUMMARY: In her U.S. News & World Report column, Gloria Borger asserted that "[n]o one would accuse [Sen. John] McCain [R-AZ] of equivocating on anything." But McCain has done just that on a variety of issues, including tax cuts for the wealthy, abortion, teaching intelligent design to public school students, and the Confederate flag.

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In her latest column, posted online on October 29 and that will appear in the November 6 edition of U.S. News & World Report, U.S. News contributing editor and CBS News national political correspondent Gloria Borger asserted that "[n]o one would accuse [Sen. John] McCain [R-AZ] of equivocating on anything." Writing about the prospect of Sen. Barack Obama's (D-IL) running for president in 2008, Borger contrasted him with McCain, asserting that Obama's "penchant for wishy-washy is well documented." Yet as Media Matters for America has repeatedly noted, despite an abundance of well-documented backtracks, flip-flops, and inconsistencies, the media continue to describe McCain with words such as "honest" and "authentic" and generally regard him as an unwavering purveyor of "straight talk." Some examples of McCain's hedging include:

Tax cuts for the wealthy

Regarding President Bush's 2001 tax cut package, which overwhelmingly benefited the rich and contributed to the transformation of the budget surplus into a deficit, McCain said, "I cannot 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 need tax relief," according to a February 27 article in The Washington Times. Yet in 2006, when Congress was considering extending Bush's 2003 capital gains tax cuts, which benefited mainly the richest Americans, McCain voted with his Senate Republican colleagues to keep them on the books. When asked during the April 2 broadcast of NBC's Meet the Press why he changed his mind on Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy, McCain replied: "I do not believe in tax increases. ... The tax cuts are now there, and voting to revoke them would have been to -- not to extend them would have meant a tax increase." Even tax-cutting advocates who cheered McCain's reversal could not help but call it what it was: "It's a big flip-flop," said conservative movement leader and president of Americans for Tax Reform Grover Norquist, "but I'm happy he flopped."

Abortion

As the Associated Press reported on August 24, 1999, while on the campaign trail in New Hampshire that year, McCain proclaimed himself a pro-life candidate. However, he told reporters that "in the short term, or even the long term, I would not support repeal of Roe v. Wade." When his comments came under fire from pro-life groups, he wrote a letter to the National Right to Life Committee, stating: "I share our common goal of reducing the staggering number of abortions currently performed in this country and overturning the Roe vs. Wade decision."

When Republicans in South Dakota passed a ban on almost all abortions, providing an exception only to save the life of the woman, McCain was asked by the National Journal's The Hotline what he would have done had he been governor of the state. His office replied that McCain "would have signed the legislation, but would also take the appropriate steps under state law -- in whatever state -- to ensure that the exceptions of rape, incest or life of the mother were included." He gave no indication what steps he could take to change a law he already signed.

Intelligent design

In 2000, McCain declared that the teaching of "intelligent design" was a matter for local school boards to decide, in contrast to then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush's position that creationism should be taught in classrooms. As The New York Times reported on August 3, 2005, however, McCain expressed more openness to the idea of intelligent design that year, saying that "different schools of thought" about the origins of mankind should be presented to students. The later statement mirrored what President Bush had said just three weeks earlier, when he defended the teaching of intelligent design by saying, "I think that part of education is to expose people to different schools of thought."

Confederate flag

When asked during the 2000 Republican presidential primaries about his thoughts on the Confederate flag, McCain gave the answer that many South Carolina conservatives wanted to hear: "Personally, I see the flag as a symbol of heritage." After the primaries, when the need to curry favor with conservatives had passed, McCain admitted during the October 15, 2002, broadcast of CBS' The Early Show that he believed in 2000 that "the Confederate flag should be taken down," but that, in an "act of political cowardice," he "didn't say so" because "everybody said, 'Oh, look out, you can't win in South Carolina if you say that.' "

From Borger's November 6 column in U.S. News & World Report:

The reasons for Obama's popular appeal may well be his political flaw: He's reasonable. He looks for solutions. There is no enemies list. All good. Yet, his penchant for wishy-washy is well documented. He splits hairs, is noncommittal and overly judicial. It's gotten him in hot water with Sen. John McCain, who could face off with Obama in 2008. No one would accuse McCain of equivocating on anything: When Obama backed out of a bipartisan, McCain-led group on lobbying reform-to run the Democratic version-McCain exploded. In writing, which almost never happens in the clubby Senate, the Arizonan blasted Obama for his "disingenuousness" and "self-interested partisan posturing."

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    • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 30, 2006 9:51 pm ET)
         

      that means you're solid on a given point on a given day.When you change your position to appeal to another audience, to adjust to polls, or because you realize you were wrong,just say you never held the other position.

      Those nutty Dems go out and put together sentences with commas in them, that express two ideas on the same day.Those can get confusing to the crowd that considers "United We Stand" a comprehensive philosophy.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by rusty shackleford (October 31, 2006 11:40 am ET)
           

        Why do you hate America so much? Is it just because you want to fight the terrorists over here? Or are you just a slave to Nancy Pelosi and her San Fransicko values?

        Report Abuse
        • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 31, 2006 2:32 pm ET)
             

          I hate America with a blind seething passion for no apparent reason at all.

          Just like my boiling vicious unexplained hatred for that nice Bush man.

          I used to think I was pretty hate-free, and was just disgusted with lying politicians and gullible voters.That was before Fox news and Rush analyzed my irrational hate.

          I also hate your freedom.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by rusty shackleford (October 31, 2006 2:34 pm ET)
               

            My freedom pisses me off too. I just hate it so much!!!!!

            Report Abuse
            • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 31, 2006 3:59 pm ET)
                 

              Sorry Rusty, I wasn't responding to you, I was typing along to my George Michael record.

              Report Abuse
    • Author by magnolialover (October 31, 2006 12:15 pm ET)
         

      I used to have some respect for McCain as a Senator, no longer. He's sold out to the extreme right of the country, and that's not good.

      He should hang up his Presidential bid before he gets started. It would save him some time and money that's for sure.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by cb (October 31, 2006 4:22 pm ET)
           

        for an apology from John Kerry for insulting the troops with his "only stupid people are in the military" comments. Looks like that won't happen.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by HuntingtonBeachLefty (October 31, 2006 11:10 pm ET)
             

          comments that he didn't make but that the righty media machine is pounding into the gullible?

          Report Abuse
          • Author by cb (November 01, 2006 8:16 am ET)
               

            He said, he meant it, and the media reported exactly what he said. To suggest that this was a bad attempt at some sort of joke about Bush is ridiculous! Let's face it...he's had plenty of practice telling jokes about the president. I don't buy the story that he just goofed it up. That would be right up there with some other whoppers...there is a Santa Clause...there is an Easter Bunny and John Kerry wasn't really insulting the troops. He made a big mistake and he should just apologize and move on. He's already shot himself down for '08. That didn't take long.

            Report Abuse

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