BEDFORD, N.H., Jan. 8, 2008

McCain: "I Always Told You The Truth"

GOP Primary Winner Revels In Comeback, Campaign Looks Ahead

  • Play CBS Video Video McCain: We Sure Showed 'Em!

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    John McCain came from behind to win New Hampshire's Republican primary by a sizeable margin, beating former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney. Kelly Cobiella reports.

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  • Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., addresses supporters on election night in Nashua, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008. McCain won the New Hampshire Republican primary, completing a remarkable comeback and climbing back into contention for the presidential nomination.

    Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., addresses supporters on election night in Nashua, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008. McCain won the New Hampshire Republican primary, completing a remarkable comeback and climbing back into contention for the presidential nomination.  (AP)

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(CBS)  By CBSNews.com political reporter David Miller.

John McCain won the New Hamsphire Republican primary Thursday, a victory that propels him to the front of the race for his party's nomination and caps a stunning comeback.

The scene at McCain’s victory party in Nashua - with supporters cheering “Mac is back!” throughout the evening - would have been considered improbable only a few months ago, a fact McCain acknowledged in addressing supporters.

“My friends, you know, I’m past the age when I can claim the noun ‘kid,’ no matter what adjective precedes it,” said the 71-year-old McCain, “but tonight we sure showed them what a comeback is.”

McCain, an Arizona senator, defeated Mitt Romney, 37 percent to 32 percent, despite being heavily outspent by Romney, who held large leads in polls as recently as two weeks ago. The victory is McCain’s second in New Hampshire, which he won by a wide margin over George W. Bush in 2000.

After McCain’s campaign nearly collapsed in mid-2007, he shifted almost all his time and resources to the state, a move that kept him in contention throughout the year, and in the closing weeks, allowed him to surpass Romney, the former governor of neighboring Massachusetts.

"I talked to the people of New Hampshire, I reasoned with you, I answered you, sometimes I argued with you,” McCain said. “But I always told you the truth as best I can see the truth. And you did me the great honor of listening.”

While McCain’s victory gives him a significant momentum boost - a loss here would have likely been the end of his campaign - he is by no means the Republican front-runner. Romney’s financial resources will allow him to field organizations in later states for some time, and though Mike Huckabee, winner of Thursday’s Iowa caucuses, did not perform well in New Hampshire, he is expected to do much better in states that have large contingents of evangelical Christians and other socially conservative voters.

The McCain campaign is already playing down expectations for South Carolina, saying it doesn’t consider the state essential to securing the nomination. Huckabee is expected to do well there.

“I think South Carolina will be a fight,” McCain adviser Mark McKinnon said. “It will be a good fight. I don’t know if we’re going to win South Carolina. I don’t think we have to.”

McCain’s camp, however, is gearing up for a fight in Michigan, which he will visit Wednesday. The state gave McCain a victory in the 2000 primary, but Romney could benefit from being the son of the late Gov. George Romney, who is remembered fondly there.

Also on the horizon is a possible threat from Rudy Giuliani, who has opted to focus on winning large states later in the year, starting with Florida’s Jan. 29 primary. Nicolle Wallace, a CBS News political analyst and former Bush administration aide, said both Romney and Giuliani could still halt McCain’s progress.

“He's gonna have to show the party that he's got an organization that can do battle with Rudy’s war chest and organization and Romney’s well-oiled machine,” she said. “McCain doesn't have much of a machine to speak of."

McCain’s fall over the summer was largely the product of weak fundraising and his support of a comprehensive immigration deal in the Senate that would have provided a path to citizenship for illegal aliens already in the country. However, the bill caused a fierce uproar among Republican voters, who, polls indicate, consider the issue a priority, and McCain’s standing in polls dropped rapidly.

The campaign now believes that the result in New Hampshire means the controversy over McCain’s views on immigration is behind him. “What they said tonight is they totally accept John McCain’s position on immigration,” McKinnon said.

McCain, who focused on the issue of combating Islamic terrorism in his victory speech, may have also been aided by an increased focus on foreign policy in the closing weeks of the campaign, said GOP pollster Tony Fabrizio, who pointed to the recent assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

“It refocused the debate at a critical time on John McCain and his foreign policy credentials,” he said. “Mike Huckabee doesn't know what's going on, and John McCain certainly has more credentials than Mitt Romney.”

While McCain and his supporters were jubilant tonight, there are parallels to his 2000 campaign that are foreboding. That year, McCain largely skipped Iowa and won in New Hampshire. Then he won in Michigan. But his presidential hopes were extinguished with a loss in South Carolina.

That exact sequence of events, polls indicate, could happen this time around. But, so far, McCain’s camp isn’t concerned about history repeating itself.

“I think eight years ago was eight years ago,” said senior adviser Steve Schmidt. “I think that John McCain has learned some lessons from this campaign. It’s a totally different time in the history of the country.”


By David Miller
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by vincan-2009 January 11, 2008 12:44 AM EST
McCain has changed himself from a man of integrity to a Bush asskisser. He used to be someone I admired, but no more. He went from being the man who told the truth to now parroting whatever Bush says. Why? It makes no sense to me. Now he''s in the same boat as Bush with no credibilty.
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by candide777 January 9, 2008 6:08 PM EST
He really needs to back off the whole "truth" thing. He can''t even give a straight answer about his immigration policy as Romney made painfully clear during the last debate. I know why he''d rather not talk "straight" about immigration (because Americans are irrational when it comes to this issue), but he shouldn''t keep touting the "truth" thing if he can''t deliver. He needs to just admit it, he''s a politician.
Reply to this comment
by infidel_us January 9, 2008 4:20 PM EST
I made a deal with my republican friends: If they stop lying about Democrats, I''''ll stop telling the truth about republicans.
Posted by wfbdem at 08:25 AM : Jan 09, 2008

And if your ''friends'' are from NH, I''ll bet they took you up on it.
Reply to this comment
by infidel_us January 9, 2008 4:18 PM EST
McCain: "I Always Told You The Truth"

He always told them HIS version of the truth. I''m sure he thinks he''s the arbiter of all that is righteous, but McCain is NO conservative and doesn''t stand a chance.
Reply to this comment
by simonsez40 January 9, 2008 3:14 PM EST
Considering all things in the past record--Why would anyone vote for a Republican. The dollar has lost approximately 40% of it''s value, a barrel of oil has increased from $22+ to $100, the national debt has increased 60%, after 1758 days in Iraq we have lost over 4000 of our young soldiers, over 28,000 have been wounded--of the wounded over 5,000 have horrible, disabling injuries, our image in the world has gone south, and we are now in a recession. Want more of the same????
Reply to this comment
by random_radar January 9, 2008 2:41 PM EST
McCain: "I Always Told You The Truth"

Who cares, If Americans wanted to hear the truth, they wouldn''''t have elected GW Bush, twice.

Posted by omega39 at 10:24 AM : Jan 09, 2008

OUCH! The truth really does hurt.

Hey, but lets predict the future:

Next week, Romney wins Michigan as the native son. Everyone will have one a contest. Then we go to South Carolina for a Huckabee Kodak moment. Then on to Super Tuesday where we really will see some results.

Heck, even a former New York mayor might have a chance if we don''t end the campaign in the first month.
Reply to this comment
by omega39-2009 January 9, 2008 1:24 PM EST
McCain: "I Always Told You The Truth"

Who cares, If Americans wanted to hear the truth, they wouldn''t have elected GW Bush, twice.
Reply to this comment
by barbaraf4 January 9, 2008 12:52 PM EST
McCain scares me to death. He is a w*h*o*r*e who will do or say anything to be elected President.
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by prinzowhales January 9, 2008 12:37 PM EST
New Hampshire Republicans must agree with McCain...they are willing to keep America''s children in Iraq for one hundred years and spend trillions to contol Haifa Street in Baghdad and little else.

A former Congressman from Georgia once described Congress as being composed of "knaves and fools" writing that the fools thought the knaves their best friends and supported them...Generalizing this, we have the unhappy tale of the New Hampshire primary and the silly creatures who supported McCain and the other supporters of Bush Regime''s policy of endless war, mega-corruption, open borders and police state madness.
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by walt1944-2009 January 9, 2008 12:16 PM EST
"Bagdad" John McCain says that he has "always told the truth".

This is true, except when he is lying, which must mean he is telling the truth when he is lying, however, how can he be telling the truth when he is lying, unless he is lying about telling a lie, which could mean he is really telling the truth, but if he is lying, how could he be telling the truth, etc, etc!! - From The Great Republican Spin Machine Bible.

SIG HEIL, BUSH!!!!
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