McCain: New Yorker Cover Is "Offensive"
In Interview With CBS News, Republican Candidate Also Defends Record On Immigration
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Play CBS Video Video McCain: New Yorker Was Wrong In an exclusive interview with Maggie Rodriguez, Sen. John McCain called a New Yorker cover cartoon picturing Barack Obama as a radical "wrong" and "offensive."
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Video La Raza Gets Obama, McCain The growing Latino voting block demands recognition from both Sen. John McCain and Sen. Barack Obama. Both candidates are speaking at the La Raza conference in Calif. Maggie Rodriguez reports.
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Video Courting The Latino Vote Barack Obama and John McCain are courting the powerful Latino vote in states like Florida and California. Jeff Greenfield opines that the Hispanic voting bloc could decide the general election.
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Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., campaigns at the San Diego Convention Center during the National Council of La Raza keynote luncheon in San Diego, Calif., Monday, July 14, 2008. (AP)
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In-Depth VP Hot Sheet: McCain CBSNews.com ranks the top contenders to be McCain's running mate.
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Interactive Immigration And Naturalization Who's coming to America? Find out what's being done to screen for terrorists and take a citizenship quiz.
Rodriguez: I want to ask you a news of day question, if I may…
McCain: Sure
Rodriguez: Have you seen the cover of the New Yorker?
McCain: Yes
Rodriguez: Your feeling. Is satire acceptable?
McCain: I don't think so. I'll leave that judgment to the American people. I can only state my personal opinion… if it's an attempt at satire, it's wrong. It's wrong and it's offensive
Rodriguez: With regard to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, do you feel a government bailout is the solution?
McCain: I think the proposal that has been made, I don't call it quote bailout though it certainly is significant assistance in a number of ways, is an appropriate measure to take. Americans are angry, they are angry and upset. They're sick and tired of Washington doing nothing for them.
Rodriguez: How much blame should the Bush administration take for that?
McCain: I think that the problem has been festering for many many many years. Fannie and Freddie were not created by the Bush administration. Look at some of the Congressional action, lack of oversight by the administration, by Congress, by everybody, it's a failure that's there plenty of blame to go around.
Maggie Rodriguez: You championed a comprehensive immigration reform bill that now as the nominee you wouldn't even vote for if it came up today. Why not?
John McCain: The point is the point is not that I would vote for it or not vote for it. The point is it failed twice. Senator Kennedy and I and a group of senators brought it up twice and it failed twice.
Rodriguez: The fact that it failed, does that tell you the American people didn't want it or that your party didn't want it?
McCain: The American people didn't support - I still believe that we reflect the views of the majority.
Rodriguez: Some political analysts say, and in fact Senator Obama made the comments here yesterday that when you became the nominee, you could no longer risk alienating your conservative base, you started emphasizing border security over a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
McCain: Actually as soon as we failed, I said that we obviously had for the second time - I led on the issue.
I didn't have to do this Maggie. I knew that it was going to hurt me in my quest for the nomination of my party because it was not popular with the base of my party. But it's because I put my country first. And I always put my country first. Senator Obama had the choice of doing the bidding the labor unions or putting his country first. He chose the special interests.
Senator Obama supported measures which would have killed the comprehensive approach
Rodriguez: What do you say to the American worker who feels the undocumented worker are taking his or job?
McCain: I agree with them. But I would also point out there are jobs it is clear that still need to be filled.
Americans want the confidence that we'll have secure borders and then I believe the overwhelming majority of them will support a humane and compassionate approach to temporary worker program and to comprehensive immigration reform.
Rodriguez: But securing the border could take years. What if it never happens? When will you get to comprehensive immigration reform?
McCain: We are moving forward right now with securing our borders.
Rodriguez: If in one year or two years the border isn't secure, what will you do?
McCain: It will be secure.
Rodriguez: It will be secure?
McCain: It will be secure, sure. It will be secure in a very relatively short period of time.
Rodriguez: Like a year?
McCain: It will be done in a very short period of time
Click below to watch Maggie Rodriguez's interview with John McCain.
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- The thing that bothers me is that Hussein sat in the pews for 20 years listening to hate sermons and did nothing. 20 years listening to hate speeches and did not utter a word in protest. This is the man who said he wants to unite the nation.
I find Hussein really offensive. - Reply to this comment
- Rasmussen reports that eighty-three percent (83%)of American voters place a higher priority on encouraging immigrants to speak English as their primary language.
Voters overwhelmingly reject Obama''s call for bilingualism. We can all expect another Obama flip-flop on this issue. - Reply to this comment
- mccain think taxing the rich is offensive...
- Reply to this comment
- I find Mr Potato head offensive...:]
- Reply to this comment
- I find McCain offensive. Charles Manson could probably get elected president over John McCain.
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Posted by LibH8e
If that could happen we have bigger problems than a candidate you don''t like. - Reply to this comment
- I find McCain offensive. Charles Manson could probably get elected president over John McCain.
- Reply to this comment

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