Amid A Resignation of One, McCain Says Another Obama Vice-Presidential Vetter Tainted By Pardon of Mr. Rich
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"Just when Obama thought all his troubles over the vetting of his vetters for his V.P. slot would all go away - especially since he already told Americans that he doesnât go around vetting his vetters - McCain points out to the news media that there is a problem with yet another of his V.P. vetters.
Republican officials had just days ago seized on a report in Saturdayâs Wall Street Journal about James A. Johnson, saying that Johnson received discounted rates on two mortgage loans from Countrywide Financial Corp. after he stepped down a decade ago as the head of Fannie Mae.
RNC spokesman Alex Conant had charged the issue âraises serious questions about Obamaâs judgment when we learn members of his campaign leadership are receiving favors that the average American would never get.â
According to the Journal, overall, Johnson received $7 million in loans from Countrywide.
McCain thinks another member of his vice-presidential selection committee, Eric Holder, should be scrutinized as well.
âMr. Holder recommended a pardon for Mr. Rich, and all of those things should be taken into consideration by the media and the American people,â McCain said. âEspecially when you are entrusting these individuals with one of the most important decisions that a presidential candidate can make before heâs elected, and that is who his running mate is.â
Mr. Rich is Marc Rich, a financier who was charged with 51 counts of tax evasion along with allegations of illegal oil dealings with Iran. He fled to Switzerland during his prosecution. Denise, his wife, was a donor to President Bill Clinton, who eventually pardoned Rich during the last week of his presidency. Mr. Holder, being the number two official at the Justice Department at the time, helped Clinton obtain the pardon for Rich.
âI think people in the media and observers will make a decision as to whether these people, individuals, should be part of Sen. Obamaâs campaign,â McCain said in Boston, Massachusetts, on Thursday. âI think it is a matter of record that Mr. Holder recommended the pardoning of Mr. [Marc] Rich.â
Republican Party spokesman Alex Conant called Obama ânaiveâ and âhypocriticalâ after Obamaâs remarks Tuesday, before Johnson stepped down.
McCain spokesman, Tucker Bounds, said Johnsonâs resignation âraises serious questions about Barack Obamaâs judgment.â
In other presidential news, McCain and Obama differ on Supreme Court decision favoring Guantanamo Bay terrorist.
âThese are unlawful combatants,â McCain said. âThey are not American citizens.â But he also reiterated his stance that the prison should be closed. âI always favored closing Guantanamo Bay, and I still think we ought to do that,â McCain said.
âThis is an important step,â Obama said of the ruling, âtoward re-establishing our credibility as a nation committed to the rule of law, and rejecting a false choice between fighting terrorism and respecting habeas corpus. Our courts have employed habeas corpus with rigor and fairness for more than two centuries, and we must continue to do so as we defend the freedom that violent extremists seek to destroy.â
McCain was one of the chief Senate architects of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which denied detainees a right to challenge their status in civilian courts, which Obama opposed.
In still other news, read here about McCain getting some attention from Jewish Democrats.
âMany Jewish Democrats are sensing there is such an existential threat to Israel that you have to vote for an individual who strongly supports the U.S.-Israel relationship,â Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), chairman of the GOPâs Jewish Victory Coalition, told The Hill.
In related news, Cantor also berated Obama as being âout of touch.â
âSo clearly itâs not just working families. Itâs communities across the country who are struggling up under these high costs, and for Sen. Obama to indicate that weâll just have to get used to them is clearly an indication that he is out of touch,â Cantor said yesterday in a McCain campaign conference call.
âClearly the country is in shock when they see escalating gas prices,â Cantor said. âItâs time for us to act.
Also, McCain is renewing calls for town hall meetings with Obama.
âMy position on the war is clear,â McCain told reporters yesterday. That would be that the surge of troops is working, that it would be surrender to withdraw before Iraq is stable, and that he can envision a longer-term peacekeeping role in which US troops would not take many casualties.
âThatâs why we need town hall meetings,â McCain said, so the candidates can clearly and fully explain their positions.
Also, there seems to be trouble brewing on Obamaâs Hillary flank.
âWe will not be bullied, brainwashed, or bossed into falling in line,â a spokesperson for the group calling itself Party Unity, My Ass (PUMA) recently wrote. One member has told NEWS.com.au: âThey pushed the weaker of two candidates over the edge and will have to deal with the consequences - President McCain.â
Also of note is co-chair of the University of Iowa chapterof Students for Hillary Clinton, Cody Eliff, who the co-chair in question, wrote:
âThis was a VERY tough decision, those of you that know me know I am extremely passionate about our party. I feel that it has moved away from me. We will not campaign for John McCain, but we will vote for him, and urge others to do the same.â
Finally, McCain, it is believed, will be the first US presidential candidate to speak in Canada during a US presidential election campaign."
http://777denny.wordpress.com/
"Just when Obama thought all his troubles over the vetting of his vetters for his V.P. slot would all go away - especially since he already told Americans that he doesnât go around vetting his vetters - McCain points out to the news media that there is a problem with yet another of his V.P. vetters.
Republican officials had just days ago seized on a report in Saturdayâs Wall Street Journal about James A. Johnson, saying that Johnson received discounted rates on two mortgage loans from Countrywide Financial Corp. after he stepped down a decade ago as the head of Fannie Mae.
RNC spokesman Alex Conant had charged the issue âraises serious questions about Obamaâs judgment when we learn members of his campaign leadership are receiving favors that the average American would never get.â
According to the Journal, overall, Johnson received $7 million in loans from Countrywide.
McCain thinks another member of his vice-presidential selection committee, Eric Holder, should be scrutinized as well.
âMr. Holder recommended a pardon for Mr. Rich, and all of those things should be taken into consideration by the media and the American people,â McCain said. âEspecially when you are entrusting these individuals with one of the most important decisions that a presidential candidate can make before heâs elected, and that is who his running mate is.â
Mr. Rich is Marc Rich, a financier who was charged with 51 counts of tax evasion along with allegations of illegal oil dealings with Iran. He fled to Switzerland during his prosecution. Denise, his wife, was a donor to President Bill Clinton, who eventually pardoned Rich during the last week of his presidency. Mr. Holder, being the number two official at the Justice Department at the time, helped Clinton obtain the pardon for Rich.
âI think people in the media and observers will make a decision as to whether these people, individuals, should be part of Sen. Obamaâs campaign,â McCain said in Boston, Massachusetts, on Thursday. âI think it is a matter of record that Mr. Holder recommended the pardoning of Mr. [Marc] Rich.â
Republican Party spokesman Alex Conant called Obama ânaiveâ and âhypocriticalâ after Obamaâs remarks Tuesday, before Johnson stepped down.
McCain spokesman, Tucker Bounds, said Johnsonâs resignation âraises serious questions about Barack Obamaâs judgment.â
In other presidential news, McCain and Obama differ on Supreme Court decision favoring Guantanamo Bay terrorist.
âThese are unlawful combatants,â McCain said. âThey are not American citizens.â But he also reiterated his stance that the prison should be closed. âI always favored closing Guantanamo Bay, and I still think we ought to do that,â McCain said.
âThis is an important step,â Obama said of the ruling, âtoward re-establishing our credibility as a nation committed to the rule of law, and rejecting a false choice between fighting terrorism and respecting habeas corpus. Our courts have employed habeas corpus with rigor and fairness for more than two centuries, and we must continue to do so as we defend the freedom that violent extremists seek to destroy.â
McCain was one of the chief Senate architects of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which denied detainees a right to challenge their status in civilian courts, which Obama opposed.
In still other news, read here about McCain getting some attention from Jewish Democrats.
âMany Jewish Democrats are sensing there is such an existential threat to Israel that you have to vote for an individual who strongly supports the U.S.-Israel relationship,â Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), chairman of the GOPâs Jewish Victory Coalition, told The Hill.
In related news, Cantor also berated Obama as being âout of touch.â
âSo clearly itâs not just working families. Itâs communities across the country who are struggling up under these high costs, and for Sen. Obama to indicate that weâll just have to get used to them is clearly an indication that he is out of touch,â Cantor said yesterday in a McCain campaign conference call.
âClearly the country is in shock when they see escalating gas prices,â Cantor said. âItâs time for us to act.
Also, McCain is renewing calls for town hall meetings with Obama.
âMy position on the war is clear,â McCain told reporters yesterday. That would be that the surge of troops is working, that it would be surrender to withdraw before Iraq is stable, and that he can envision a longer-term peacekeeping role in which US troops would not take many casualties.
âThatâs why we need town hall meetings,â McCain said, so the candidates can clearly and fully explain their positions.
Also, there seems to be trouble brewing on Obamaâs Hillary flank.
âWe will not be bullied, brainwashed, or bossed into falling in line,â a spokesperson for the group calling itself Party Unity, My Ass (PUMA) recently wrote. One member has told NEWS.com.au: âThey pushed the weaker of two candidates over the edge and will have to deal with the consequences - President McCain.â
Also of note is co-chair of the University of Iowa chapterof Students for Hillary Clinton, Cody Eliff, who the co-chair in question, wrote:
âThis was a VERY tough decision, those of you that know me know I am extremely passionate about our party. I feel that it has moved away from me. We will not campaign for John McCain, but we will vote for him, and urge others to do the same.â
Finally, McCain, it is believed, will be the first US presidential candidate to speak in Canada during a US presidential election campaign."