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Wash. Post's Weisman ignored actual criteria used in study finding McCain voted with Bush 90 percent of the time

September 05, 2008 7:38 pm ET

SUMMARY: In an online chat, Jonathan Weisman claimed of the finding that Sen. John McCain voted in line with President Bush 90 percent of the time, "The 90 percent figure is true, but I cover Congress. The vast majority of those votes are procedural, and virtually every member of Congress votes with his or her leadership on procedural motions." In fact, Congressional Quarterly's finding that McCain had voted with Bush 90 percent of the time was based on an analysis of "votes where the editors of Congressional Quarterly determined that President Bush had taken a clear position prior to the vote." CQ did not indicate the "vast majority" of the votes were procedural.

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In a September 5 online chat, Washington Post national political reporter Jonathan Weisman claimed of the finding that Sen. John McCain voted in line with President Bush 90 percent of the time, "The 90 percent figure is true, but I cover Congress. The vast majority of those votes are procedural, and virtually every member of Congress votes with his or her leadership on procedural motions." In fact, Congressional Quarterly's finding that McCain had voted with Bush 90 percent of the time was based on an analysis of "votes where the editors of Congressional Quarterly determined that President Bush had taken a clear position prior to the vote." CQ gave no indication that the "vast majority" of the votes it analyzed to determine presidential support were procedural votes.

CQ separately analyzed how often members of Congress voted with the majority of their party in "all roll-call votes where an absolute majority of one party voted against an absolute majority of the other party." According to CQ, McCain voted with his party 81 percent of the time.

CQ, a nonpartisan publication, describes its process for determining presidential support as follows:

Presidential Support: This analysis uses all votes where the editors of Congressional Quarterly determined that President Bush had taken a clear position prior to the vote. There were 443 such votes in the House during the period (9 percent of the total) and 564 such votes in the Senate (22 percent).

On average, House Republicans supported Bush on 80 percent of such votes and Democrats supported the president on just 20 percent. In the Senate, where votes on confirmations tend to elevate presidential support scores, Republicans voted with Bush 88 percent of the time, and Democrats gave him their support on 51 percent of the relevant votes.

CQ describes its party unity score as follows:

Party Unity: This analysis looks at all roll-call votes where an absolute majority of one party voted against an absolute majority of the other party. There were 2,675 such votes in the House during the period (52 percent of the total) and 1,505 such votes in the Senate (58 percent).

From Weisman's September 5 washingtonpost.com chat:

Anonymous: Sen. Obama says a McCain Administration would not represent a change from Bush administration policies since Sen. McCain has voted in favor of Bush 90 percent of the time. Is this true?

Jonathan Weisman: The 90 percent figure is true, but I cover Congress. The vast majority of those votes are procedural, and virtually every member of Congress votes with his or her leadership on procedural motions.

That said, on the two fundamental issues of the campaign -- the Iraq war and economic policy -- McCain and Bush are indeed pretty much on the same page.

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    • Author by BottleBlonde (September 05, 2008 8:04 pm ET)
         
      Omigod. He's so drunk on the KoolAid he doesn't even realize he bought into the false meme from the Republicans that the evaluation of McCain's voting record is 100% accurate and valid, and therefore is damning evidence of McCain's lack of maverick-ness.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by powie5611 (September 07, 2008 11:13 am ET)
           
        Oh, now, don't you know the last 8 years (10 years if you count how long the Republicans controlled congress) never happened? The Republican message being regurgitated by the MSM is: "George W who?" "Never heard of him".
        Report Abuse
        • Author by see it real (September 07, 2008 10:11 pm ET)
             
          Yeah, the lying Republicans made Liar Bush and Liar Cheney disappear-ify, using the Bush-speak terminology.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by snoopy (September 06, 2008 1:28 pm ET)
         
      The video was produced by an up-and-coming comedy troupe called Olde English. Watch:

       

      Report Abuse
    • Author by see it real (September 07, 2008 10:12 pm ET)
         
      The Washington Post has been right wing conservative for a long time, even more so these past 8 years.
      Report Abuse

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