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Paris, Tire Gauges, and Illegal Contributions: McCain's Bad Week

Posted by Digby, Hullabaloo at 12:32 PM on August 7, 2008.


"The tenor of this race, aided by events, has changed. McCain is on the defensive."

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I think Chris Bowers is absolutely right -- Paris Hilton's response to John McCain's celebrity ad has turned the tide of this race to a certain extent. Actually it occurred at a confluence of events: Obama calling McCain and his minions "proud to be ignorant" about car maintenance and fuel efficiency; Obama running a response ad to McCain's O.M. Original Maverick (ya hear?) ad:

And then Paris pops up with a piece of video offering an objectively more substantive energy plan than McCain ever has. As Bowers says:

Hilton's response is now the top story on Google News, and apparently the McCain campaign is receiving so many media requests about it, that they had to post a response on their website. They have gotten into a spat with Paris Hilton, which there is basically no way to win. Hilton has nothing to lose, and the back and forth just highlights the frivolic idiocy of McCain's recent attacks.

She's also squeezed him to an extent. Hilton basically endorsed a compromise proposal (I can't believe I wrote that sentence) of limited drilling as a bridge to a green energy future. That's not true; the meager take from coastal drilling is not nearly enough to build that bridge. But in the political context, both candidates are actually agreeing with this, as it's laid out in the bipartisan "Gang of Ten" plan on energy in the Senate. It's a true compromise, and it includes eliminating tax breaks for oil companies and funneling that money into alternative energy research. That central plank of the Democratic Party agenda (it was part of 6 for '06) polls extremely well, in the 70% range. But McCain has already gone on the record against the Gang of 10 compromise:

A spokesman for Sen. McCain said that while he "applauds the bipartisan effort," he wouldn't support the proposal because "he cannot and will not support legislation that raises taxes."

Which opens up a huge gap for Obama to exploit, when everybody figures out that making oil companies rich(er) is McCain's only objective.

What's more, Obama's mockery on the tire gauge nonsense has forced McCain up against a wall on that score:

Predictably, Obama hit back calling McCain's mockery "ignorant," arguing his plans were being misrepresented and saying that experts backed his call over tire pressure. Equally predictably, McCain's camp hit back.

The surprise came during a telephone town hall meeting McCain held on Tuesday with voters in Pennsylvania.

"Obama said a couple of days ago says we all should inflate our tires. I don't disagree with that. The American Automobile Association strongly recommends it," McCain said.

The dispute now rests on a lie that the tire pressure tip is Obama's entire energy plan, which has been dismissed as foolishness in just the right way ("it's like these guys are proud to be ignorant").

Finally, there's an extremely damaging A1 story in the Washington Post this morning that is the result of Obama's recent ads mentioning the $2 million McCain has collected from the oil companies since his change of heart on drilling. There's a throughline between the focus on lobbyists and oil companies and bundlers and donations and this story:

The bundle of $2,300 and $4,600 checks that poured into Sen. John McCain's presidential campaign on March 12 came from an unlikely group of California donors: a mechanic from D&D Auto Repair in Whittier, the manager of Rite Aid Pharmacy No. 5727, the 30-something owners of the Twilight Hookah Lounge in Fullerton.

But the man who gathered checks from them is no stranger to McCain -- he shuttled the Republican on his private plane and held a fundraising event for the candidate at his house in Delray Beach, Fla.

Harry Sargeant III, a former naval officer and the owner of an oil-trading company that recently inked defense contracts potentially worth more than $1 billion, is the archetype of a modern presidential money man. The law forbids high-level supporters from writing huge checks, but with help from friends in the Middle East and the former chief of the CIA's bin Laden unit -- who now serves as a consultant to his company -- Sargeant has raised more than $100,000 for three presidential candidates from a collection of ordinary people, several of whom professed little interest in the outcome of the election [...]

Earlier this week, McCain drew questions about more than $60,000 in donations that were made this year to the Republican National Committee and his campaign by an office manager with the Hess oil company and her husband, an Amtrak track foreman. In that case, the couple said they used their own money.

Some of the most prolific givers in Sargeant's network live in modest homes in Southern California's Inland Empire. Most had never given a political contribution before being contacted by Sargeant or his associates. Most said they have never voiced much interest in politics. And in several instances, they had never registered to vote. And yet, records show, some families have ponied up as much as $18,400 for various candidates between December and March.

Both Sargeant and the donors were vague when asked to explain how Sargeant persuaded them to give away so much money.

There's at the very least the impression of straw donations here, an appearance of impropriety. I know that McCain is not in control of his own campaign, but all the connections to Big Oil and shady lobbyists and curious donations ought to take its toll (though I think the media will be consumed with Paris today).

The tenor of this race, aided by events, has changed. McCain is on the defensive.

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by its writers are their own.


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Has he 1)had a Stroke 2) Sold His Soul or 3) Sending smoke signals
Posted by: Purple Girl on Aug 7, 2008 12:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since Mac didn't really allow a review of his medical records in any legitimate fashion- who Knows about his physical or mental status
His constant about faces on issue and a personality that as scripted as he's speechs, I have little doubt on this one.
But the thrid expalnation could also fit- Could mac be gtting his revenge on CheneyCorp- leading them a primrose path- just to assure he loses the race in Nov. I'm such DICKs got a direct hand on this boner of a campaign.
Could this be a true selfless act of heroism from Mac- taking one for the US team, ending both CheneyCorp and Clinton Inc's undue influence in DC. "Takin' a Dive"?
Pinch me I'm dreaming, that man is no longer with US.

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Don't really think it will be McCain come November. . . .
Posted by: NthnBrazil on Aug 7, 2008 1:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know this has been raised in other places (HuffPo that I know of) but the writing is on the wall that McCain will not be the Republican nominee coming out of the convention. The ineptitude just keeps mounting. None of his tactics are sticking (most are outright backfiring) and we all know that the first televised head to head debate is going to remove the last barrier: McCain is going to come off as a doddering old codger compared to Obama and the country just doesn't trust old white men by default anymore.

So, one of two things is bound to happen. Either a back-room deal will be made and McCain will drop out due to health concerns before the convention or he will try to withstand the tide of a rebellion at the convention, ultimately resulting in him not being the nominee. Either way it causes an unprecedented situation I won't even take a stab at predicting the outcome of.

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» Who knows Posted by: NthnBrazil
Saddle Tramp
Posted by: Saddle Tramp on Aug 7, 2008 2:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If it's been such a bad week, then why is he still so close in the polls? Redneck America? Stooopid white people? Ignorant America? WTF!?

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Supernova!
Posted by: LionHeart on Aug 7, 2008 5:59 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually it's been a pretty bad week for Obama.. He blew a 9 point lead and now behind by a point (even I guess in the land of polls).

Hilton was pretty funny and as i saw it pressed the point of the mindless superstar crowd Obama is being linked to.

Can anyone figure out how much lower Obama can drop. Like most superstars they can burn out pretty quick. Poll i heard on the radio (accuracy in question) 30% of registered dems are tired of hearing the name Obama!

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» RE: Supernova! Posted by: Benjaminsjw
» RE: Supernova! Posted by: PJAW
Look, All I Want To Know Is...
Posted by: ranchero42 on Aug 7, 2008 7:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why was she hiding the dog? Was she afraid people would think she was making fun of Johnny the Desert Rat-Faced Boy?

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maybe he needs a nap...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Aug 8, 2008 9:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm trying to imagine him slumped in a corner of the Senate or wandering the halls with his very own Cranky Old Dude Homeless Vet On Military Pension -cum- MIT-developed WarCart...

nah! he has his own Obama-stickered BUS & all the corporate & VA funding he could REQUIRE!!

so I guess the snoring McSame in Senate is the MORE LIKELY PREMISE...


┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄┄
BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
┄┄
" ... tolerance of intolerance is cowardice... " ~ Ayaan Hirsi Ali.
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
┄┄
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
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Worst (and most likely) case scenario:
Posted by: luckypuck on Aug 8, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Allowing offshore drilling is opening Pandora’s box. The problem with this “compromise” is that once those multibillion dollar rigs are built and operating there’s no way Big Oil is just going to abandon them. The few years (if any) between the oil starting to pump and when those alternate energies get up and running, will never be enough time to pay off the cost of the rigs plus drilling and delivery expenses. What happens then? The Bigs can’t just stop pumping, so they’ll start to cut costs and, of course safety goes first.

Think all kinds of oil spills when equipment breaks down because repairs and maintenance cost the Bigs too much. Besides, it cuts into the CEO’s next yacht and private jet purchases.

The Bigs are leveraging the people’s fears (wrought by the sorry state of Bush’s economic disaster) to accomplish what even they probably couldn't push through Congress. This so-called compromise, short-term or long-term, only benefits the Bigs’ wallets and bottom lines.

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Straight talk
Posted by: PJAW on Aug 8, 2008 2:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Straight out of the horse's mouth..., er... ASS!

Have you noticed how weird McCain is becoming during this campaign? (sorry, of course you have, you'd have to be sleeping to not notice) He's a "maverick" alright, a maverick from himself. I expect an influx of whiplash cases from people trying to watch him switch from one side to the other on major issues. It'll make you crazier than following the ball at the recent Federer/Nadal Wimbledon tennis final.

This week's gaff over Obama's energy plan was like a starving ADD 6 year old at an all-you-can-eat smorgasbord. He looks at all the fabulous food and starts screaming, "I DON'T WANT BUNS, THIS IS STUPID! BUNS WON'T SATISFY ANYONE'S HUNGER, THIS PLACE SUCKS!!" Then after several minutes of a tantrum that disrupts the entire restaurant, he decides, "These buns are really good, everyone should eat buns!", as though he discovered buns.

Will anyone be surprised when he finally reads Obama's energy plan and decides it has real ideas in it, ideas that make sense and could actually improve the situation? Of course then he'll be telling everyone he's got some great ideas for America's energy future, despite his history of opposing every innovation for the last quarter century. And Obama just wants everyone to eat buns..., or inflate tires. If it wasn't so freakin' serious, it'd be absolutely hysterical.

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McBushCain
Posted by: frank69 on Aug 9, 2008 6:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There was a book about JFK: "Johnny, we hardly knew thee."

There will be a new book about JSMcBushCain:
"Who the hell are you."

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benwha11
Posted by: benwha11 on Aug 11, 2008 4:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Harry Sargeant III was not a Naval Officer but a Marine Corps Officer and fighter pilot. And as the finance Chairman for the Republican Party of Florida his most prolific givers in his network would not be Southern Californians that are living in modest homes. If that were the case the role of Finance Chairman would go to somebody else. If you would take a look at the Huffington Post and campaign donations you'll find that his most prolific givers are wealthy people in very expensive homes.

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