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McCain, Bush Embrace Party Unity
San Diego U-T ^ | August 21, 2004 | Todd S. Purdum

Posted on 08/21/2004 7:59:51 AM PDT by onyx

WASHINGTON – It was one of the oddest embraces in American politics since Sammy Davis Jr. hugged Richard Nixon at the Republican Convention 32 years ago this summer: George W. Bush and John McCain's back-wrapping bearhug and side-head-smooch on the campaign trail last week.

For most of the past four years, McCain and the man who beat him for the Republican nomination in a bitter campaign in 2000, have treated each other like a pair of reversed magnets, members of the same metallurgical family held apart by reciprocal repulsion. Now their locked arms are raising eyebrows.

"Don't make people who hate you hug you," Bill Maher joked on HBO's "Real Time." "Whatever the Bush administration is blackmailing John McCain with, stop!"

The newfound friendship might be good for late-night laughs, but it is deadly serious political business for both men, the result of a deliberate, months-long effort by the White House to woo the Arizona senator – perhaps the most popular national political figure in the country – and of McCain's self-interested susceptibility to same. The turnabout could not be more striking, and for both men the stakes could be nothing less than the presidency itself.

Four years ago, relations were so strained that McCain left the Republican Convention in Philadelphia two days early, returning for the final night only after a last-minute request by the Bush team. This year, he will have a prime-time speaking slot on the convention's first night in New York City, play host to the network anchors at a private dinner the day before, campaign with the president in several states the day after, speak to 10 or 15 state delegations and preside over a celebrity party with comedian Darrell Hammond on the eve of Bush's re-nomination.

So what's up? Pure political physics, friends of both men say.

Bush is locked in a tight race with McCain's old Senate friend Sen. John Kerry and needs all the belated help he can get with the moderate, Democratic and independent voters who love McCain. And McCain, who has spent months earning the ire of his party by saying nice things about Kerry and nasty ones about some Bush policies, is eager to show, like Dr. Seuss' punctilious pachyderm, that he may have meant what he said and said what he meant, but "an elephant's faithful 100 percent."

Whether Bush wins or loses, the Republican race for the White House will be wide open in 2008, and while McCain has often suggested he would not run again, politicians never really mean never. As he learned in 2000, McCain could not win the nomination without broader backing from the party establishment than his independence sometimes allows.

"John is so sharp," said former Sen. Alan K. Simpson of Wyoming. "I think he knows that whatever his future is, it can never go anywhere unless he's seen as supportive of the party and supportive of the president, and anything else will abort whatever he may have in mind."

And what can McCain do for the president?

"A lot," Simpson said, "because he knows the power of John McCain, he's felt the sting of that before himself, and I think he's gratified and genuinely pleased and very happy that John will do this. We need all the horses in the corral for this one, I'll tell you."

The thaw began last spring, just around the time that McCain briefly allowed the fantasy of his becoming Kerry's running mate to flourish for a news cycle or two, and the Kerry camp did its best to keep the idea alive for weeks. All the excitement about national unity was not lost on Bush's chief political adviser, Karl Rove, who offered an olive branch to John Weaver, one of McCain's closest advisers. Rove and Weaver were compatriots turned sworn enemies dating to their days in Republican politics in Texas.

At Rove's invitation, he and Weaver met at a Caribou Coffee shop across from the White House, hashed out some differences, and "you can see where we are today," as one longtime McCain confidant put it on condition of anonymity. McCain's first joint appearance with Bush came on a Western swing in mid-June, where Bush first surprised him with an enveloping hug and a whisper in the ear, McCain aides said.

But by the time of their embrace in Pensacola, Fla., last week, McCain seemed entirely complicit, reaching out his arms toward the president, who pecked him on the temple.

"I wouldn't characterize either man as a hug victim," said Weaver, who now works mostly for Democrats but was conducting a pre-convention walk-through of Madison Square Garden with the Bush team this week. "I think they were mutual hugs, and mutual looking forward."

Bush's campaign spokeswoman, Nicolle Devenish, said simply, "I don't think either man is capable of pretense."

The logic of the love-fest is simple enough on both sides. No national politician can touch McCain's lopsided favorable ratings of 39 percent to 9 percent unfavorable in the most recent New York Times/CBS News poll. And McCain, for all his maverick qualities, remains a Republican at heart, one who has steadfastly supported Bush's broad national security policy since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks even while dissenting over some of the administration's execution and vigorously critiquing domestic policies like taxes and limits on stem-cell research.

"I'm proud to be traveling with John McCain," Bush said in Panama City, Fla., last week. "What a fantastic American he is." In Pensacola, McCain returned the favor, saying Bush had "led with moral clarity and firm resolve."

McCain was traveling in Ukraine and unavailable for comment, his office said, but another of his longtime advisers, Rick Davis, insisted that the alliance was not so hard to understand.

"I think what they've found is McCain doesn't upset their conservative base, because he's a conservative," Davis said. "He's both a religious conservative, he's pro-life – you couldn't run a thread between his position on abortion and Bush's – and yet at the same time he speaks to a much broader audience politically. So why not hang around with that guy?"

Another longtime McCain adviser suggested, on condition of anonymity in a sign that the new alliance had not completely ended all one-upmanship, that Bush's embrace had effectively empowered McCain to keep speaking out. "It's almost liberating," the adviser said, "because they also need him to continue to be independent."

From that challenge, McCain has not shrunk. Since joining the president on the trail, he has attacked Bush's proposal to amend the Constitution to ban same-sex marriage as "antithetical in every way to the core philosophy of Republicans." He has called on the president to denounce advertisements run by some supporters questioning Kerry's Vietnam service, denouncing it as "the same kind of deal that was pulled on me," in 2000 by Bush supporters.

Bush has so far ignored McCain's demand to condemn the advertisements, and McCain has declined to discuss whatever he may have privately urged the president to do. All that has left some Democrats more than a little skeptical about the whole arrangement and may create some risk that McCain will alienate the very swing voters who so admire him.

"Bush is so desperate to ride Sen. McCain's wave that he's taking the idea of kiss and make up a little too far," said Kerry's spokeswoman, Stephanie Cutter. "Maybe now he'll take McCain's advice and denounce the dishonest and dishonorable ads attacking Kerry's military record."

Stuart Starky, an eighth-grade public school math teacher in South Phoenix who is the Arizona Democrats' long-shot challenger to McCain's own re-election this fall, has his own theory. "I truly believe he's going to run for president again," Starky said in a telephone interview. "It's an open seat for the Republicans either way, and this is his way of saying, 'Win or lose, I'm with the team.' "


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush; gwb2004; mccain; rncconvention; unity
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1 posted on 08/21/2004 7:59:51 AM PDT by onyx
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To: onyx

Oh how they hate McCain campaigning with POTUS. This article and pic are on the front page below the fold.

2 posted on 08/21/2004 8:02:08 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx
Can't see Todd Purdham's byline without thinking of this FR thread :)
3 posted on 08/21/2004 8:03:50 AM PDT by mewzilla
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To: onyx
It just doesn't seem to pass the smell test. I mean, McCain says he's a republican and should support the president. But, he's a lose canon. There is a reason why the Dems love him so much. Besides, he actually thought McCain-Feingold was a good idea?

Sorry to be negative about one of our own, but ...

4 posted on 08/21/2004 8:06:37 AM PDT by kdot
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To: onyx
"Bush is so desperate to ride Sen. McCain's wave"

What planet do these Democrat shills live on? IIRC, Bush TROUNCED McCain in the primaries four years ago. It's more like McCain is riding the Bush wave, trying to stay relevant for the next 4 years. Kerry was the one shamelessly and desparately trying to attach a Republican's name to his candidcacy. Sheez!
5 posted on 08/21/2004 8:08:18 AM PDT by over3Owithabrain
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To: onyx
This year, he will have a prime-time speaking slot on the convention's first night in New York City, play host to the network anchors at a private dinner the day before..

But the networks aren't carrying McCain's speech (or Rudy's or anything else on the first night of the convention).

6 posted on 08/21/2004 8:08:50 AM PDT by Leroy S. Mort
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To: mewzilla
WOW. That must have really stuck with you.

The article handles McCain carefully, but
can't resist trying to smear their "unity."

John cares what the media think of him...
that's his Achilles heel, and the cause of my frustration with him.
7 posted on 08/21/2004 8:11:33 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx
"Bush is so desperate to ride Sen. McCain's wave that he's taking the idea of kiss and make up a little too far," said Kerry's spokeswoman, Stephanie Cutter. "Maybe now he'll take McCain's advice and denounce the dishonest and dishonorable ads attacking Kerry's military record."

Yeah, Dubya will "take McCain's advice" -- the exact same day McCain breaks out of his cell and covinces Dubya to share a bong hit of crack cocaine.

8 posted on 08/21/2004 8:13:27 AM PDT by F16Fighter
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To: over3Owithabrain

They're mad because McCain appeals to the mushy middle,
and they had such high hopes of Kerry appealing to those folks. Won't happen.


9 posted on 08/21/2004 8:14:46 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx

Gag me with a RINO


10 posted on 08/21/2004 8:16:35 AM PDT by spycatcher
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To: onyx
Lol, THAT pic appears to be a Kerry/Edwards "moment."

Oooh, that's gotta be making the Dems sooo jealous...

11 posted on 08/21/2004 8:16:39 AM PDT by F16Fighter
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To: F16Fighter

One of the Swifties is Paul Gilante... a top guy in McCain's 2004 campaign. John is not about to call Gilante a liar. I wish John would shut-up about the Swifties,
because he KNOWS they're telling the truth.

Again, it's his desire to appear statesman-like and to
maintain the devotion of the media, never realizing that
his so-called media friends are "using" him.


12 posted on 08/21/2004 8:19:49 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx

I don't like McCain, but if he helps deliver AZ, NV and NM for W, he'll earn back some of my respect.


13 posted on 08/21/2004 8:20:42 AM PDT by comebacknewt
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To: F16Fighter

Now that you mention it, the pic is a keeper. :)


14 posted on 08/21/2004 8:21:11 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx
WOW. That must have really stuck with you.

It surely did. Just another reason why I trust the Weekly World News more than I do the NYT :)

15 posted on 08/21/2004 8:25:09 AM PDT by mewzilla
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To: onyx

Actually, McCain appeals to the 'rats. It helps both Bush and McCain.

McCain probably does have ambitions post-Bush. However, he will be too old as he is not a Reagan.

Blessings, Bobo


16 posted on 08/21/2004 8:26:32 AM PDT by bobo1
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To: onyx

"Sammy Davis Jr. hugged Richard Nixon"

Sammy Davis Jr was a republican??


17 posted on 08/21/2004 8:28:54 AM PDT by Stellar Dendrite
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To: bobo1

Too old?
LOL!
He and my aged husband were classmates at USNA.
Husband doesn't think John will be too old in 2008. :)


18 posted on 08/21/2004 8:29:52 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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To: onyx
Bill Maher joked on HBO's "Real Time."

Should read "Unreal Time".

19 posted on 08/21/2004 8:31:22 AM PDT by Missouri (Deport Teresa)
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To: Stellar Dendrite

Yes, in one (and maybe both) of Nixon's elections, Sammy was a huge supporter of Nixon.


20 posted on 08/21/2004 8:31:25 AM PDT by onyx (JohnKerry -- the standard bearer for the unbearable)
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