BREAKING: Desperate McCain Trying To Back Out Of Tomorrow’s Debate

Scott | Politics | Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

From jnail on PoliticalBase.com

“At 8:30 this morning, Senator Obama called Senator McCain to ask him if he would join in issuing a joint statement outlining their shared principles and conditions for the Treasury proposal and urging Congress and the White House to act in a bipartisan manner to pass such a proposal,” Obama spokesman Bill Burton said in a statement. “At 2:30 this afternoon, Senator McCain returned Senator Obama’s call and agreed to join him in issuing such a statement. The two campaigns are currently working together on the details.”

So Obama led by calling him to do something in a bipartisn way and McCain then has to shoot first and try and gain advantage from it in the face of 3 polls that have him in real trouble as well as others in the battleground states.

Note he returned Obama’s call 6 hours later – AFTER this stunt

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McCain’s Horseshit of the Day

Scott | Politics | Saturday, September 20th, 2008

(via anonymousliberal.com)

“Good morning. This is John McCain, speaking to you from Green Bay, Wisconsin. Here and all across our country, people are wondering what exactly is happening on Wall Street. And with good reason, they want to know how their government will meet the crisis. Clear answers are hard to come by in Washington.

There are certainly plenty of places to point fingers, and it may be hard to pinpoint the original event that set it all in motion. But let me give you an educated guess. The financial crisis we’re living through today started with the corruption and manipulation of our home mortgage system. At the center of the problem were the lobbyists, politicians, and bureaucrats who succeeded in persuading Congress and the administration to ignore the festering problems at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

This is, quite simply, an astoundingly inaccurate diagnosis of the problem. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are, at best, a peripheral part of this story. As this industry expert points out, Fannie and Freddie were “nowhere near the biggest culprits in the recent credit bubble…The bad assets at the heart of this credit collapse are the mortgages that weren’t sold to Fannie and Freddie, but were instead packaged and commoditized and sold to everyone else.

These quasi-public corporations led our housing system down a path where quick profit was placed before sound finance. They institutionalized a system that rewarded forcing mortgages on people who couldn’t afford them, while turning around and selling those bad mortgages to the banks that are now going bankrupt. Using money and influence, they prevented reforms that would have curbed their power and limited their ability to damage our economy. And now, as ever, the American taxpayers are left to pay the price for Washington’s failure.

Fannie and Freddie weren’t leading anything. They were constrained by law to only accept certain kinds of loans. The problem was that a bunch of sub-prime lenders appeared on the scene and started selling new types of loans to people who couldn’t afford them. If those lenders had been regulated the way Fannie and Freddie were, we wouldn’t be in this mess. These sub-prime lenders flourished in the non-regulated environment Republicans allowed to occur and developed the sort of “innovative products” that McCain praised as recently as this month.

Two years ago, I called for reform of this corruption at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Congress did nothing. The Administration did nothing.

That would be the Republican administration and Republican Congress, right? Plus, two years ago the housing bubble was already bursting. Action needed to be taken 7 or 8 years ago. And again, while Fannie and Freddie could have been regulated better, they weren’t really the problem. The reason Fannie and Freddie eventually had to be taken over was because the housing slump got so bad that even home owners with conforming loans began to default.

Senator Obama did nothing, and actually profited from this system of abuse and scandal. While Fannie and Freddie were working to keep Congress away from their house of cards, Senator Obama was taking their money. He got more, in fact, than any other member of Congress, except for the Democratic chairman of the committee that oversees them.

First, Fannie and Freddie were not a house a cards. The cards here were the mortgage-backed securities held by everyone else. Second, McCain’s claim that Obama was taking money from Fannie and Freddie is dishonest as hell. He’s basing this claim on the fact that some employees of the two mortgage giants have given money to Obama’s presidential campaign (just like employees from every other company in America have). Obama hasn’t taken a dime from any industry lobbyists. Moreover, as CNN just pointed out (I’ll try to find a link), McCain has taken WAY more money from Fannie and Freddie executives, board members, and lobbyists than Obama has (the figures CNN used were $169,000 for McCain compared to $16,000 for Obama).

This is the problem with Washington. People like Senator Obama have been too busy gaming the system and haven’t ever done a thing to actually challenge the system. The crisis on Wall Street started in the Washington culture of lobbying and influence peddling, and he was square in the middle of it.

As McCain constantly points out, Obama hasn’t been in Washington very long. He was only there for about two years before this campaign started. McCain was there for 26 years. And not only that, but his campaign is literally run by former Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lobbyists. Rick Davis, his campaign manager is one of them. And the notion that Obama spent his limited time in Washington in bed with lobbyists and influence peddlers is preposterous and not based on any actual facts. Obama’s chief legislative accomplishment was passing an ethics reform bill that the limited the influence of these people.

The financial services industry — and there are many honest and honorable people who work in it — plays a vital role in our economy. Yet it’s clear financial firms have lost the trust of the American people. Government has a clear responsibility to act and to defend the public interest. That is exactly what I intend to do.

I’m glad that McCain has had an epiphany and now sees a vital role for the government in regulating the banking industry, but there’s just no getting around the fact that this is a major change in philosophy for him. As I noted earlier, McCain praised the deregulation of the banking industry in an article that was published this week. And he suggested we should bring the same deregulatory approach to health care. Meanwhile, Obama has been calling for tighter regulation of the mortgage industry since the day he joined the Senate and has long discussed the need for government regulation of financial markets.

What we’re seeing here is a candidate who has absolutely nothing honest to say on this issue, the most important issue of the day. McCain’s response to this crisis has been to completely distort not only his own record and that of his opponent, but to lie to voters about the nature of the very problem itself. This is a profoundly unserious and dishonest man who is flailing right now and doing anything he can to waive voters away from the obvious conclusions they should be reaching.

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Great comment on McCain’s convention speech

Scott | Politics | Saturday, September 6th, 2008

James Taranto

McCain completely refuted and destroyed his critics’ claim he’s a war-monger. In his acceptance speech in front of Walter Reed Middle School, he said he wasn’t.

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A noun, a verb and “prisoner of war”

Scott | Politics | Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Why is the latest (among many) McCain gaffe so great?

(via anonymousliberal.com)

First, and most obviously, it underscores the economic message that the Democrats are trying to convey. We’re in the middle of a major housing crisis and people are struggling to keep from losing their homes. The economy is the number one issue, and the Democrats are trying to paint McCain as being out-of-touch and unaware of the problem. Obama’s sharpest ad over the last week was the one that played McCain’s prior statements about the strength of the economy and asked: “How can he fix the economy if he doesn’t even know it’s broken.” This gaffe plays beautifully into that theme.

Second, the gaffe badly damages the “everyman” image that all Republican presidential candidates, including McCain, try to convey. It’s hard to image a more out of touch statement. Comedians will have a field day with it.

Third, it goes a long way toward neutralizing McCain’s central attack theme: the “celebrity” charge. Who seems more like a “celebrity”: Obama or the guy who has to ask his staff how many houses he owns? Maybe Paris Hilton can sympathize.

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