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NY Times Endorsement Of John McCain

My, how time flies.

A mere ten months ago the New York Times had a lot of good things to say about Mr. John McCain:

Primary Choices: John McCain

Published: January 25, 2008

We have strong disagreements with all the Republicans running for president. The leading candidates have no plan for getting American troops out of Iraq. They are too wedded to discredited economic theories and unwilling even now to break with the legacy of President Bush. We disagree with them strongly on what makes a good Supreme Court justice.

Still, there is a choice to be made, and it is an easy one. Senator John McCain of Arizona is the only Republican who promises to end the George Bush style of governing from and on behalf of a small, angry fringe. With a record of working across the aisle to develop sound bipartisan legislation, he would offer a choice to a broader range of Americans than the rest of the Republican field.

We have shuddered at Mr. McCain’s occasional, tactical pander to the right because he has demonstrated that he has the character to stand on principle. He was an early advocate for battling global warming and risked his presidential bid to uphold fundamental American values in the immigration debate. A genuine war hero among Republicans who proclaim their zeal to be commander in chief, Mr. McCain argues passionately that a country’s treatment of prisoners in the worst of times says a great deal about its character.

Why, as a New York-based paper, are we not backing Rudolph Giuliani? Why not choose the man we endorsed for re-election in 1997 after a first term in which he showed that a dirty, dangerous, supposedly ungovernable city could become clean, safe and orderly? What about the man who stood fast on Sept. 11, when others, including President Bush, went AWOL?

That man is not running for president.

The real Mr. Giuliani, whom many New Yorkers came to know and mistrust, is a narrow, obsessively secretive, vindictive man who saw no need to limit police power. Racial polarization was as much a legacy of his tenure as the rebirth of Times Square.

Mr. Giuliani’s arrogance and bad judgment are breathtaking. When he claims fiscal prudence, we remember how he ran through surpluses without a thought to the inevitable downturn and bequeathed huge deficits to his successor. He fired Police Commissioner William Bratton, the architect of the drop in crime, because he couldn’t share the limelight. He later gave the job to Bernard Kerik, who has now been indicted on fraud and corruption charges.

The Rudolph Giuliani of 2008 first shamelessly turned the horror of 9/11 into a lucrative business, with a secret client list, then exploited his city’s and the country’s nightmare to promote his presidential campaign.

The other candidates offer no better choices.

Mitt Romney’s shape-shifting rivals that of Mr. Giuliani. It is hard to find an issue on which he has not repositioned himself to the right since he was governor of Massachusetts. It is impossible to figure out where he stands or where he would lead the country.

Mike Huckabee, the former governor of Arkansas, is an affable, reassuring Baptist minister who talks about a softer Christian conservativism. His policies tell the real story. To attract Republican primary voters, he has become an anti-immigrant absolutist. His insertion of religion into the race, herding Mr. Romney into a defense of his beliefs, disqualified him for the Oval Office.

Mr. McCain was one of the first prominent Republicans to point out how badly the war in Iraq was being managed. We wish he could now see as clearly past the temporary victories produced by Mr. Bush’s unsustainable escalation, which have not led to any change in Iraq’s murderous political calculus. At the least, he owes Americans a real idea of how he would win this war, which he says he can do. We disagree on issues like reproductive rights and gay marriage.

In 2006, however, Mr. McCain stood up for the humane treatment of prisoners and for a ban on torture. We said then that he was being conned by Mr. Bush, who had no intention of following the rules. But Mr. McCain took a stand, just as he did in recognizing the threat of global warming early. He has been a staunch advocate of campaign finance reform, working with Senator Russ Feingold, among the most liberal of Democrats, on groundbreaking legislation, just as he worked with Senator Edward Kennedy on immigration reform.

That doesn’t make him a moderate, but it makes him the best choice for the party’s presidential nomination.

Of course we realize that it is a cokehead homosexual’s woman’s prerogative to change her mind.

And the truth, as always, be damned. 

6 Responses to “NY Times Endorsement Of John McCain”

  1. The real endorsement worth looking at…
    http://www.detnews.com/apps/pb.....30337/1008

    They do it… albeit begrudgingly.

    The Detroit news. Funny I don’t see many talking about it yet.

  2. catie

    Wow, I never saw this coming-sarc off.

  3. larddiet

    Did John McCain really think the media was going to stay on his side against a Democratic Presidential candidate? I never got the impression that he thought that but I couldn’t begin to guess. I can only hope he didn’t expect a one party media was going to take his side when there is a candidate more to the left of him to choose from.

  4. Liberals Demise

    Well at least the Times stock is tanking and falling like a brick. DIE you commie bastion of pinko theories and loony left ideology!! DIE you PUTZ!!

  5. catie

    So off topic but speaking of the “press”-on my Yahoo home page there is a story on a goalie that tripped over a carpet after Sarah Palin dropped the puck at a hockey game-LA I believe. Anyway, the goalie was out of the game and maybe for a few more and they wanted to know if he “blamed” Governor Palin for his injury. To their surprise he said that he didn’t and she’s been good for the game and he likes her more and more he gets to know her. I get the same garbage on my AT &T page-After sad visit, Obama back on the campaign trail. It’s all the “media” thank goodness for a page like this. What will happen after the election, will this go away?

  6. Miss Scarlett

    NY Times hypocrites? What else is new! Sort of off subject, but did anyone hear the Howard Stern show where he sends a “journalist” to interview potential voters in Harlem? Said “journalist” questions random residents as to whether they agree with Obama’s position on certain issues; yet, all the issues are MCCAIN’s! For instance, when questioned about Obama’s choice of Sarah Palin as VP, the resident stated that she agreed with Obama and thinks Sarah Palin is a great choice for VP. Are you kidding me? It’s too pitiful! Do these people even know who they are voting for?

    Rest assured, thanks to ACORN they are indeed registered, along with their dead relatives, pets, and favorite cartoon characters, for that matter.

    But, alas, they are probably ignorant of the election date. As my friend Karen said, the only dates these leaches remember are the 1st and the 15th—when they pick up their welfare checks.

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