I don’t think the argument holds that this will unite movement
conservatives around McCain as the victim of the liberal media’s
old gray lady. This is a terribly damaging story, and it’s hard to believe that there’s not a lot more to it that will be forthcoming. McCain’s adamant denial this morning that there is any truth to it means that either the Times has been completely irresponsible or that McCain is lying. Either is possible, but which is the more likely? And if the story becomes one of McCain’s lying about all of this, it clearly undermines whatever shred of credibility he has about being the straight shooter. It’s hard to see how he could survive that.
One could also ask if this is Huckabee’s miracle or a second one for Obama. If this knocks McCain out, could Obama waltz into the White House essentially unopposed the way he waltzed into the senate after his GOPer opponent dropped out because of sex scandal? This time with Mike Huckabee playing the Alan Keyes role? How strange would that be? It raises question about Obama’s working and ongoing contractual arrangement with the big red-complected fella with the horns and the long, pointy tail.
But let’s leave aside questions who benefits most from the release of this story. The story, whatever the motivations behind its release, is now out there, and it’s a stick that stirs the hornet’s nest of McCain’s past. All kinds of things will now be revisited, including his involvement with the Keating five, the scandal in the early nineties about Cindy McCain’s Limbaughesque addiction to painkillers, which she stole from a non-profit she headed. Not to mention McCain’s caddish behavior while still married to his first wife. There is a pretty ugly picture that emerges from behind of the carefully crafted image of the straight shooter. McCain is starting to look a lot more like Giuliani–or just like another typical GOP pol in the pocket of Big Money.
Because the aspect of this story that is most troubling is the way
in which it reveals the influence of lobbyists on our lawmakers.
Commenter eggroll at TPM makes the point:
Go
back to 2000 and the Bill Thomas affair. Before taking over the House
Ways and Means Committee, the legislator had a 3-year affair with
top-tier Medicare lobbyist, Deborah Steelman. The short-lived public
kerfuffle provided a brief insight into big pharma’s between-the-sheets
efforts in DC. After a short statement from Thomas’ wife that the
matter was private, Steelman went on to run Communications for Eli
Lilly, and Thomas jumped the queue to head up Ways and Means (largely
on Republican suspicions that the notoriously smart Thomas needed more
adult upervision). To this day, Thomas remains the leading suspect for
insertion of the Thimerosal provision in the Patriot Act, suggesting
that he was compromised for years.Both the McCain and Thomas stories illustrate the comfort level lobbyists had with top guy in Congress in that period.
This
story, if it turns out that there was an affair, is different from and
more serious than the Clinton/Lewinski affair precisely because it
shows how manipulable McCain is by people who have a special-interest
agenda. Clinton may have shown he’s a lech with powerless intern, but
it’s far more serious to be a lech with a lobbyist.
TPM commenter flyonthewall sums it up:
Here’s the de minimus reading of the Times piece: John
McCain, who certainly ought to have known better, given the sordid
rumors that have swirled about him at an earlier stage in his life,
again placed himself in a compromising position with a woman not his
wife, whose career depended on his goodwill. Even if they were just
good friends, even if he just enjoyed the attention of a pretty, young
blond woman who made him feel young again, even if they never crossed
the line to physical intimacy, I think this story is incredibly
damaging for a man running on his integrity. It calls into question his
judgment, his honesty, and his maturity.And, if anyone ever gets ahold of any actual evidence, as opposed to
rumor and innuendo, things get a whole lot worse for the senator from
Arizona.
And
my guess is that more evidence will be forthcoming–if not from the
Times, from elsewhere. One could argue that from a strategic point of
view, assuming McCain survives this, it’s better to get it all aired
out now and move on. But McCain is emerging as precisely the kind of
candidate that represents everything Americans are tired of in the
Beltway culture, and precisely the kind of thing that makes Obama look
all the more attractive.
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