NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday March 5, 2008
John McCain Promises Arizona Families a Third Bush Term
Washington, DC – Hours after clinching his Party’s nomination, the one-time “maverick” completed his transformation into a full-fledged Bush Republican by heading to the White House this afternoon to receive President Bush’s formal endorsement.
In his desperation to cozy up to the right wing of the Republican Party, McCain has endorsed President Bush’s decision to deny health care for 83,000 Arizona children by vetoing SCHIP expansion, threatened the retirement security of Arizona seniors by promising to privatize Social Security, further strained Arizona’s reserve and national guard units by promising to keep our troops in Iraq for 100 years, and promised more of the same on everything from ethics to the economy. In fact, despite widespread economic anxieties facing working families in Arizona and across America, McCain said he thinks the economy is strong and refuses to say whether he supports President Bush’s threat to veto a Democratic bill to help struggling homeowners fighting to avoid foreclosure. Instead, McCain’s idea of short-term economic stimulus for working families is making President Bush’s tax cuts for the rich permanent... in 2010.
“Voting for John McCain is like voting for a third George Bush term,” said Maria Weeg, executive director of the Arizona Democratic Party. “Here in his home state, we’ve learned that he’s driving the Double Talk Express, and that as he’s pursued his national aspirations, he has abandoned Arizonans.”
In fact, in Arizona voters recognize his shift to the extreme right wing. Independent voters, McCain’s traditional supporters, have been abandoning the former “maverick.” (http://www.azpbs.org/horizon/poll/2008/2-26-08.htm)
McCain’s Short-Term Solution For the Economy? Tax Cuts for the Wealthy in Two Years, Of Course. When asked what efforts who have a short-term impact on the economy, McCain responded “In the shorter term, if you somehow told American businesses and families, ‘Look, you’re not going to experience a tax increase in 2010,’ I think that’s a pretty good short-term measure. And as far as confidence is concerned, I think if you say, ‘Congress is going to cut corporate taxes right away,’ if you say that you’ve got a plan to eliminate the AMT, I think some of those are kind of short-term measures right now.” [Wall Street Journal, 3/3/08]
Republicans Postponing Consideration of Housing Bill So McCain Doesn’t Have to Make a Hard Vote. “Consideration of the mortgage package was delayed earlier in the week when a debate over the Iraq War lasted longer than expected. At the time, Majority Whip Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., maintained that Republicans were intentionally delaying consideration of the mortgage package so that Arizona Sen. John McCain—the presumptive GOP presidential nominee—would not have to cast a vote on the bill before the March 4 Ohio primary.” [Congressional Quarterly Today, 2/27/2008]
McCain Would Spend ‘a Hundred Years’ or a ‘Million Years’ in Iraq. McCain interrupted a voter during a town hall meeting in New Hampshire telling him we could spend “maybe a hundred” years in Iraq and “that would be fine with me.” After the town hall meeting, he told a reporter “that U.S. troops could be in Iraq for ‘a thousand years’ or ‘a million years,’ as far as he was concerned.” [McCain Derry, NH town hall meeting , 1/3/08; motherjones.com , 1/3/08]
McCain Consistently on Bush Talking Points on Iraq. In 2003, McCain echoed Bush’s rosy predictions by claiming that the end was “very much in sight” in Iraq. In 2005, McCain backed Bush, arguing that another year would prove “stay the course” was working. [The Hill, 12/8/05; ABC News, Good Morning America, 4/9/03] In 2006, McCain argued that Iraq was “on the right track” even as it slipped further toward civil war. [MSNBC, Imus in the Morning, 3/1/06] As of late, McCain’s campaign insists, “terrorists are on the run,” even while half of Afghanistan appears to have fallen back under the control of the Taliban and Osama Bin Laden remains at large. [johnmccain.com, press release, 12/17/07; Time, 12/8/07; Investor’s Business Daily, 12/14/07]
John McCain Does Not Have a Plan For the Uninsured. According to the Wall Street Journal, McCain’s plan does not focus on “reducing the ranks of the uninsured,” of which there are about 47 million, or one in seven Americans. [Wall Street Journal, 10/11/07]
McCain Opposed Reauthorizing SCHIP and Providing Insurance For Millions of Uninsured Children. McCain voted against reauthorizing the State Children’s Health Insurance Program for five years. [Senate Vote #307, 8/2/07]
2008: McCain “Totally In Favor” of Bush Social Security Plan. “I’m totally in favor of personal savings accounts and I think they are an important opportunity for young workers. I campaigned in support of President Bush’s proposal and I campaigned with him, and I did town hall meetings with him.” [Wall Street Journal, 3/3/08]
2005: McCain Campaigned for Bush Social Security Plan. “McCain has been especially supportive of his onetime rival, appearing with Bush at three events over the past two days in trying to prod Democrats into negotiations to include private accounts in a plan to revamp Social Security.” [Washington Post, 3/23/05]



