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Screenwriting

OT - McCain Denials Unravel?

John McCain¹s denials start to unravel in tale of the blonde lobbyist The Republican saviour is looking rattled after claims of a sex for favours scandal
Sarah Baxter - London TimesIf anything was going to derail John McCain¹s White House bid, it was the fear that he was too old to be president, not the likelihood of being embroiled in a sex and favours scandal. But when the Arizona senator reached for the lawyer who steered Bill Clinton through his women troubles, it was a sign that he was seriously rattled. At the moment that the race was shaping up to be an epic contest between Barack Obama and McCain ­ the future versus the past, as Obama would have it, or naivety versus experience, as McCain prefers to frame it ­ the scandal hit the newsstands.

After an early, highly successful counterattack, McCain was accused this weekend of being economical with the truth as far as some aspects of the story were concerned. The essence of the tale is fairly simple. Vicki Iseman, 40, a blonde telecommunications lobbyist, became friends with McCain, 71, eight years ago. Some advisers thought the relationship might be romantic. There is no evidence of an affair but they were certainly cosy. Iseman accompanied him to fundraisers, travelled with him on a client¹s jet and appeared to trade on her relationship with him to such an extent that McCain¹s senior advisers warned her to back off.
Adding spice to the story, Iseman appears to resemble McCain¹s wife, Cindy, another pencil-thin blonde, who stood by her husband last week as he repeatedly denied both the sexual innuendo and specific allegations of favours in the story.
John Weaver, who was once one of McCain¹s closest aides but quit his campaign last summer, said he remembered meeting Iseman at Washington¹s railway station and asked her to keep her distance from McCain, a member of the Senate commerce committee. He was concerned that Iseman¹s boasts would damage McCain¹s reputation because he had taken such a prominent stand against special interests and lobbying.
Two anonymous former associates of McCain said they confronted the senator several times about the risk to his career of showing favouritism towards Iseman. McCain wrote letters to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that were helpful to her clients, although there were other times, staff say, when he took a stand against their interests.
The thinly sourced tale had been knocking around The New York Times for months before it decided to publish, causing fury on the right that it had timed its onslaught last week to coincide with McCain¹s all-but-declared victory in the Republican nomination battle. Trying to besmirch a Vietnam war hero on the question of his universally acknowledged integrity was regarded as a low blow, unworthy of the staid Gray Lady, as The New York Times is known. If this were a British political sex scandal, it would be regarded as only a matter of time before McCain was cast into a pit of shame as new revelations inevitably appeared. But McCain was given so much warning of the story that he was able to mount a ferocious counterattack.
By the end of last week the contention by the McCain camp that the article was a fabricated ³hit-and-run smear campaign² was widely accepted. That it came from The New York Times, which had recently endorsed McCain for the Republican nomination, was an added bonus. McCain¹s popularity with the liberal media ­ his ³base², as it is jocularly known ­ has long aroused the mistrust of conservatives. Here at last was a chance for him to join forces with the right against a common enemy.
³Even if they want to quibble within our own tribe, they¹ll circle the wagons when we¹re attacked by the (New York) Times,² said Charlie Black, a senior adviser to McCain.
McCain used his victimisation as grounds for a fundraising appeal to conservatives. ³Well, here we go,² wrote Rick Davis, his campaign manager, in an e-mail to supporters. ³We need your help to counteract the liberal establishment.²
³At his press conference Thursday, McCain went all-in. He didn¹t just say he didn¹t remember a meeting about Iseman. He said there was no meeting. If it turns out that there is evidence of an affair and a meeting, then his presidential hopes will be over.²
So far nothing has surfaced on that score. But McCain made other claims that are unravelling this weekend concerning a meeting with Lowell ³Bud² Paxson, then head of Paxson Communications and a main McCain donor. The company was a client of Iseman seeking to buy a television station in Pittsburgh, but had been stalled by the FCC.
McCain insisted last week that he did not meet Paxson or Iseman before sending two letters to the FCC urging their help.
But Newsweek revealed that McCain gave a sworn deposition in a lawsuit in 2002 contradicting this assertion.³I was contacted by Mr Paxson on this issue,² McCain noted at the time. ³He wanted their approval very bad for the purposes of his business. I believe that Mr Paxson had a legitimate complaint.² He went on to declare: ³I¹m sure I spoke to (Paxson)² and admitted that the letters he wrote on his behalf could possibly have the ³appearance of corruption². A spokesman for McCain said the senator had been ³speaking in shorthand² and meant that his staff had been contacted by representatives of the company.

But Paxson emerged from retirement this weekend to claim that he did indeed meet McCain several weeks before the controversial letters were written. He also seemed to recall that Iseman was present. ³Was Vicki there? Probably,² Paxson told The Washing-ton Post. ³The woman was a professional. She was good. She could get us meetings.² If McCain¹s account of his relationship with Paxson is untrue, it raises the possibility that he may be blagging his way through other bits of the story.
When Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachu-setts, was still in the presidential race, aides began to whisper that McCain¹s candidacy was flaky. They knew The New York Times was working on the Iseman story. Romney hung on in the primary campaign as long as he could but eventually decided to stop throwing good money after bad from his own pocket and withdrew. If McCain¹s campaign collapses, the Republicans will be stuck without a presidential candidate (not counting Mike Huckabee, the former pastor, who is still around but has lost his claim to be a serious contender).
Matthew Dowd, a former adviser to President George W Bush, said the story helped Obama, if only indirectly. ³Every day that the news is being dominated by John McCain¹s troubles is a bad day for Hillary Clinton,² he said. ³And every day that isa bad day for Clinton is a good day for Barack Obama.² The closer Obama is to clinching the Democratic presidential nomination, the more he is being subjected to a barrage of negative commentary.
At this late stage, Clinton¹s best chance of a comeback rests on stories dragging Obama down. But if voters are not paying attention, they are unlikely to come to her rescue in time.
After his landslide victory in the Wisconsin primary last week, Obama is finally being subjected to the kind of scrutiny that Clinton¹s camp has been calling for all along. Three themes are being developed by conservatives: that the ³Obamessiah² is unpatriotic, self-obsessed and the most left-wing candidate in decades with a serious shot at the presidency.
It was a point made by Karl Rove, Bush¹s former adviser, in The Wall Street Journal last week. ³For Mr Obama, words are merely a means to hide a left-leaning agenda behind a cloak of centrist rhetoric,² he wrote.
McCain has already started to adopt the same line of attack against Obama as Clinton, by accusing him of being naive on foreign policy and deploying ³eloquent² but empty rhetoric.
³When I was a young man, I thought glory was the highest ambition and that all glory was self-glory,² he said pointedly. ³I do not seek the presidency on the presumption that I am blessed with such personal greatness that history has anointed me to save my country in its hour of need.²
There has been internet chatter for months that Obama once neglected to put his hand on his heart while saying the pledge of allegiance. His wife Michelle aroused the wrath of conservatives last week by saying: ³For the first time in my adult life I am proud of my country because it feels like hope is finally making a comeback.² The comment appeared to confirm suspicions that the Obamas did not share the patriotic fervour of ordinary Americans and judged the country a success only now that it was willing to send them to the White House.
McCain¹s wife Cindy, who rarely engages in political point-scoring, spotted an opportunity. ³I¹m proud of my country,² she said at a rally. ³I don¹t know about you ­ if you heard those words earlier ­ I¹m very proud of my country.² It was all going so well until her next appearance ­ in the position of loyal wife with possibly errant husband at a press conference.
Peter Wehner, a former White House adviser to Bush, has detected a ³slightly narcissistic quality² to Obama but believes he is a ³pretty cool and pretty balanced guy², despite the rock star adulation he is receiving. Accusations of vanity and self-obses-sion will ³only be a problem if they are true².
He believes the way to defeat Obama is to attack him for being a conventional liberal (the American term for a left winger). ³America is not a liberal country and that is going to be one of his biggest weaknesses.² It will still not be easy for McCain to win, he stressed. ³McCain¹s strength is not domestic or economic issues, but he is extremely strong on national security.²
A story conservatives are hoping will gain traction concerns the relationship between Obama and Bill Ayers and his wife Bernardine Dohrn, former members of the Weathermen, the 1960s terrorist group. Ayers and Dohrn went on the run in 1970 ­ while McCain was being held prisoner in the ³Hanoi Hilton² ­ and surrendered a decade later. Charges against them for participating in the Weathermen¹s bombing campaigns were dropped because of unlawful FBI surveillance. It emerged last week that Obama visited their house in Chicago for a meeting in the mid1990s where he was introduced as a potential candidate for the Illinois state senate. He went on to serve with Ayers on the board of a Chicago foundation.
Clinton would love to see more stories on the Ayers connection, but the media is unlikely to make too much of it until Obama is nominated. And for now, all eyes are on McCain¹s potential sex scandal rather the vulnerability of his Democratic rival.

"It's very hard to be a gentleman and a writer."
W. Somerset Maugham
  

Top answer

[nq:1]John McCain�s denials start to unravel in tale of the blonde lobbyist The Republican saviour is looking rattled after claims of a *** for favours scandal Sarah Baxter - London Times[/nq] (snip) This is looking like pretty much a non-story at this point. The letters have surfaced and they seem to work against the lobbiest's client's interests rather than for them, and so far no one can show even the suggestion that anything inappropriate ever happened between McCain and the gal. A pretty 32 year old lobbiest might have been flirtatious with the 63 year old man she's trying to influence?

  • [nq:1]John McCain�s denials start to unravel in tale of the blonde lobbyist The Republican saviour is looking rattled after claims of a *** for favours scandal Sarah Baxter - London Times[/nq] (snip) This is looking like pretty much a non-story at this point.
  • The letters have surfaced and they seem to work against the lobbiest's client's interests rather than for them, and so far no one can show even the suggestion that anything inappropriate ever happened between McCain and the gal.
  • A pretty 32 year old lobbiest might have been flirtatious with the 63 year old man she's trying to influence?
  • No kidding, really?
  • Who'da thunk it?
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2 Answers
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[nq:1]John McCain�s denials start to unravel in tale of the blonde lobbyist The Republican saviour is looking rattled after claims of a *** for favours scandal Sarah Baxter - London Times[/nq]
(snip)
This is looking like pretty much a non-story at this point. The letters have surfaced and they seem to work against the lobbiest's client's interests rather than for them, and so far no one
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[nq:1]This is looking like pretty much a non-story at this point.  The letters have surfaced and they seem to work against the lobbiest's client's interests rather than for them, and so far no one can show even the suggestion that anything inappropriate ever happened between McCain and the gal.  A pretty 32 year old lobbiest might have been flirtatious with the 63 year old man she's trying to in

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