May 23, 2007

Could McCain Be Burned By A Fiery Temper?

GOP Hopeful Has Returned To Old Form, But It Could Hurt Him

  • Video Republicans Take Jabs

    The theme of the evening at the second Republican presidential debate had a lot to do with the Rev. Jerry Falwell, but the candidates found time to take jabs at each other. Jeff Greenfield reports.

  • Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks at an immigration news conference at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix on on May 18, 2007..

    Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks at an immigration news conference at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix on on May 18, 2007..  (AP)

(CBS)  By The Politico's Jonathan Martin.

To anyone who has been pining for the tell-it-like-it-is John McCain who ran for president in 2000, the days of longing may be over.

In the South Carolina GOP presidential debate last Tuesday, in a closed-door gathering of senators Thursday and then on a conference call Monday with Republican-leaning bloggers, the Arizona senator flashed what may be both his biggest asset and his biggest liability: a quick wit and stiletto-sharp tongue.

The question for his presidential campaign this time is whether such attacks are helpful reminders for many people of why they originally liked the man or enhance his image as someone inclined to lose his cool when threatened.

"He's a unique candidate in American politics," said Brian Jones, McCain's campaign spokesman. "He speaks directly, very forthrightly, and has a fantastic sense of humor. It's what makes him the best candidate in the field and what attracts people to him."

Some of those qualities were on display during Monday's conference call. The New York Sun's Ryan Sager asked McCain about the efforts of former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson to score political points on immigration.

Swinging first at Romney, the senator hit the vulnerable spots. First, he attacked the former governor for his flip-flops: "Maybe I should wait a couple of weeks and see if it changes, because it's changed in less than a year from his position before."

He followed that with a one-two punch: "Maybe his solution will be to get out his small-varmint gun and drive those Guatemalans off his lawn."

Those blows were in response to Romney's earlier gaffes over his hunting prowess and an allusion to a Boston Globe report last year that Romney used, apparently unknowingly, illegal immigrants from Guatemala to do yard work.

McCain then swiped at Thompson, an old friend and colleague. "I'm a little disappointed in Fred because again he had a very different position not that long ago," he noted, referring to Thompson's less hawkish comments on border issues.

The downside of McCain's ability to deploy a quick, cutting quote is that it plays into a dangerous theme that haunted his last presidential bid: his temper.

That was on display last week. Hammering out the final details of the immigration compromise, McCain lobbed the F-bomb at Sen. John Cornyn after the Texas Republican pointed out that his colleague had missed much of the tense negotiations because he'd been on the campaign trail.

Some perceive McCain as an uncoachable politician who cannot feign interest in what doesn't interest him, must demonstrably prove what does strike a nerve and is dangerously resourceful in coming up with his own material.

"He is the candidate he is," Jones said. "You don't want to curb that, you don't want to modify that. You couldn't even if you wanted to."

Which is why after months of quiet — or at least anonymous — stewing that Romney was brazenly taking shots at McCain's conservative credentials, Jones and others were delighted to see their candidate use the Fox News-sponsored debate to throw an elbow in the direction of the smooth talker who, they loved to point out, was until fairly recently a conventional New England moderate.

When Romney sought to pair McCain's support for campaign finance reform — "McCain-Feingold" — with his backing of a comprehensive immigration bill — "McCain-Kennedy" — the old Navy aviator showed his feisty side.

"Well, I take and kept a consistent position on campaign finance reform," he said. "I have kept a consistent position on right to life. And I haven't changed my position in even-numbered years or have changed because of the different offices that I may be running for."

In his 2000 run, McCain's manner of speech was such the draw that his campaign named his bus the Straight Talk Express. Republican activists and the press both found his style refreshing, especially in contrast to the mechanical style of George W. Bush. The senator's glib observations about all manner of topics never inflicted grave damage on his campaign.

That style is more problematic now, given the changes in the technology of how politics is covered and in the sort of tougher treatment McCain is receiving this time around. But his camp recognizes the good and bad that comes with providing the access they do, and they hope it tilts to the former.

Indeed, it's not the style of the last campaign that they want to avoid but rather the substance. Specifically, McCain and his advisers know he can't win the GOP nomination if he's seen as challenging Republican orthodoxy.

And that is why it is no coincidence that all three recent examples of McCain's prickly and direct manner had to do with what is now the signal issue for the conservative base. Already viewed with doubt by some Republican regulars, McCain cannot let Romney, or anybody else, define him as uniquely out of step with the party. What campaign finance reform was to many conservative elites in 2000 is what immigration could be to the conservative grass roots in 2008: an issue that makes McCain's candidacy a non-starter.

That is, unless the Straight Talk crew can paint the other candidates as having views that are now, or were until very recently, not any different than McCain's.



By Jonathan Martin
© 2007 The Politico & Politico.com, a division of Allbritton Communications Company



We cover politics with enterprise, style, and impact.

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Add a Comment See all 18 Comments
by ralan40 May 24, 2007 2:38 AM EDT
Do you believe the "magic underwear" gives him an edge in this hypothetical endeavor?
Posted by formrusmcsgt at 07:07 PM : May 23, 2007

...No, but being a Mormon, there's the possibility he could have more than 1 First Lady visiting schools and stuff while he's tanning.
Reply to this comment
by formrusmcsgt May 23, 2007 10:07 PM EDT
An honest Commander in Chief, like ROMNEY, would do whatever it takes to save the lives of other American citizens.
Posted by r72hombre at 06:48 PM : May 23, 2007

Do you believe the "magic underwear" gives him an edge in this hypothetical endeavor?
Reply to this comment
by r72hombre May 23, 2007 9:48 PM EDT
Now let me get this straight. "McCain's honesty is refreshing"? Suppose a terrorist knew where the next nuke was that would be going off and kill 100,000+ people. Do you really want McCain to make decisions based on what other nations will think of us using torture to get that terrorist to talk? Come on! An honest Commander in Chief, like ROMNEY, would do whatever it takes to save the lives of other American citizens.
Reply to this comment
by frb01 May 23, 2007 8:12 PM EDT
John McCain is an American hero, his time as a POW and the injuries he lives with that are part of it. I would rather see a firey McCain than the one we have seen over the past year. He has never been afraid to be candid.
Reply to this comment
by randalds May 23, 2007 8:09 PM EDT
McCain gave up on Americans when he joined Kennedy and the rest of the hate-America crown backing the Illegal Aliens.

Posted by tucanofulano at 01:49 PM : May 23, 2007

For me that was almost his saving grace. He knows as others do that deporting 12 million people is about as possible as stopping the sunrise in the morning. Not very da*mn likely.
Reply to this comment
by infidel_us May 23, 2007 7:20 PM EDT
McCain is being "burned" because he's a RINO, turncoat backstabber.
Reply to this comment
by antoniof123 May 23, 2007 6:57 PM EDT
For anyone who believes that this bunch of morons are worth voting for you are nuts....
Reply to this comment
by random_radar May 23, 2007 4:59 PM EDT
The problem is that people don't care what a candidate says so long as it sounds like what they want to hear. Romney understands the art of telling people what they want to hear. McCain's honesty is refreshing, but ultimately we all know that people really don't elect honesty--they elect candidates who tell them "I will still respect you in the morning." Political sound bites are just pick-up lines. Everyone knows what we are going to do, we just need an excuse to rationalize it.
Reply to this comment
by tucano2 May 23, 2007 4:49 PM EDT
McCain gave up on Americans when he joined Kennedy and the rest of the hate-America crown backing the Illegal Aliens. Too bad, too. In any event Americans have given up on McCain - he is going nowhere but back to his property pretty near the Mexican border (which side of the line is not known).
Reply to this comment
by king77shaw May 23, 2007 4:44 PM EDT
he needs to go shopping more ...
Reply to this comment
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