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George Gervin's Afro
09-07-2008, 08:03 PM
http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/09/07/mccain-i-will-appoint-democrats-to-my-cabinet/




Republican John McCain said Sunday if he’s elected president, he will appoint Democrats to his Cabinet.

Arguing Americans’ distrust of government doesn’t break down by party, McCain said he wants the best people to tackle the nation’s toughest problems regardless of partisanship. He continued to build on his nomination acceptance speech last week in which he faulted Democrats as well as Republicans for losing their way in Washington.

“When we do all the town hall meetings and people, say I’ve lost all trust and confidence in government, they don’t say, I’ve lost confidence in Republicans, Democrats. They’ve lost confidence in everybody. The way you restore it is obviously to have a very bipartisan approach,” McCain told CBS’ “Face the Nation” in an interview taped for air Sunday.

Asked if that meant he will appoint Democrats to his Cabinet, McCain said, “Yes, of course.”

The Arizona senator said he expects Congress to return to Washington this week and spend the next month in gridlock before handing off the budget for the next Congress to tackle. He said that will leave Americans even more disillusioned, “if that’s possible.”

McCain did not say how many Democrats he would appoint to his Cabinet, but he wouldn’t be the first president to cross party lines. President Clinton chose former Republican Sen. William Cohen as his defense secretary. President Bush picked former Democratic Rep. Norm Mineta to be his transportation secretary. Mineta was in his position on Sept. 11, 2001, when all U.S. carriers in and outside the U.S. were grounded for nearly a week.

“I don’t know how many (Democrats will serve),” McCain said of his Cabinet’s configuration. “But I can tell you, in all due respect to previous administrations, it’s not going to be a single, you know, well, we have a Democrat now; it’s going to be the best people in America, the smartest people in America.”

McCain said the individuals he asks to join his Cabinet will be motivated by service over anything else.

“And I’ll tell you, some of them I’ll ask them to work for a dollar a year. They’ve made enough money. But I’ll also ask people who have struggled out there in the trenches to help people, to volunteer in their communities, who understand these problems at that level, which obviously is lost on a lot of — a lot — a big segment of Washington,” he said.

It’s believed that McCain closely considered Independent Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman as his running mate despite reports he was warned off such a move by conservatives within his party.

Continuing on his theme of shaking up Washington, McCain also defended his choice of Sarah Palin to be his running mate. The Alaska governor has helped McCain attract huge crowds since the Republican convention. But she hasn’t answered a single question from the national media yet, earning criticism that she is not prepared to be the second in command of the U.S.

McCain said Palin is ready to give her first interview, in fact, she is scheduled to be interviewed by ABC this week. McCain advised voters and the media not to underestimate her.

“This is the most popular governor in America. She has a clear record of doing what Americans want first and uppermost: Reform. Reform. She has not only talked about it, she has, she’s done it and she took on the people in her own party,” he said.

But McCain opponent Barack Obama said Palin is “more of the same.” Driving home the theme throughout the Democrats’ campaign — that McCain would be tantamount to another four years of the unpopular President Bush — Obama suggested that Palin is even closer to Bush than the Arizona senator.

McCain’s choice of Palin “tells me that he chose somebody who may be even more aligned with George Bush — or (Vice President) Dick Cheney, or the the politics we’ve seen over the last eight years — that John McCain himself is,” Obama said on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday.

Palin has been praised as a maverick but criticized by Democrats as a social conservative who opposes abortion, even in cases of rape or incest. Obama’s chief strategist, David Axelrod, questioned whether she is a reformer, telling “FOX News Sunday” that she hired a Washington lobbyist to secure federal funding for the city of Wasilla when she was mayor there, and gladly accepted federal earmarks while governor.

McCain, however, continues to try to drive the message that he — and his running mate — are reformers. In his Sunday interview, he said he bucked his own party on the war in Iraq, global warming and campaign finance reform, to name a few.

“Obviously, I was very unpopular in some parts of my own party, whether it be on the issue of climate change or against (former Defense Secretary Donald) Rumsfeld’s strategy and the president’s strategy in Iraq, or whether it be on campaign finance reform or a number of other issues that I fought against the `special interests,”‘ McCain said in an interview broadcast Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

The right wing conservatives should love this. Any thought's right wingers?

:rollin

Clandestino
09-07-2008, 08:10 PM
Our boy knows what he is doing.

Cant_Be_Faded
09-07-2008, 08:19 PM
It's funny watching devout ring wingers support this guy like he's a member of the Bush dynasty or something.

benefactor
09-07-2008, 08:24 PM
Nothing to see here...just typical campaign rhetoric.

boutons_
09-07-2008, 08:33 PM
He's try to co-opt HUSSEIN, again. HUSSEIN has ready said he will appoint the most qualified, independent of party.

McSame is desperate, his team is bankrupt of ideas that aren't fear-and-smear, so he's stealing from HUSSEIN.

Yonivore
09-07-2008, 08:43 PM
It's funny watching devout ring wingers support this guy like he's a member of the Bush dynasty or something.
A) Who else are they going to support?

B) One of President Bush's greatest allies and friends as Governor was a Democratic Lt. Governor. The right voted for Bush with that knowledge.

C) Who else are they going to support?

D) McCain has a solid -- ROCK SOLID -- history of reaching across the aisle on all manner of issues...Obama is the most liberal (based on voting record) member of either house of Congress. He never reaches across the aisle. Hell, he never reaches beyond his whacko base.

E) Who else are they going to support?

jochhejaam
09-07-2008, 08:52 PM
I imagine he has a couple in mind, but he should be specific, Joe Lieberman would be one that he would appoint, and possibly Geraldine Ferraro <contingent on her campaigning for him>

On the surface I'm not so sure this helps...at all.

Supergirl
09-07-2008, 09:04 PM
And by "democrats" he means Joe Lieberman, who last ran AGAINST the Democrats as an Independent (though he seemed to conveniently forget this fact when he spoke at the RNC) and doesn't really count as a Dem when you look at his voting record.

fyatuk
09-07-2008, 11:38 PM
While I don't doubt Lieberman gets offered some cabinet position, I doubt McCain was referring to him when he said Democrats.

McCain will probably offer positions to 2 Dems and at least 1 independent to set himself apart from the administrations who had the single token across the aisle appointment.

Aggie Hoopsfan
09-07-2008, 11:48 PM
I don't have a problem with it. Not all Democrats are idiots (just most of them ;) ).

tomtom
09-08-2008, 12:00 AM
Nice to hear some bipartisanship though it's too bad most democrats are too spineless to speak up for liberal values anyways.

Viva Las Espuelas
09-08-2008, 12:13 AM
liberal.
values.
:lol

whottt
09-08-2008, 12:35 AM
Works for me since I am a moderate...the sooner the extremists are regelated to the back burners in both parties the better.


That's going to be much tougher for the Democrats than the Republicans, since the extremists are in control of their party.


I am thrilled to have a moderate...and that's what McCain is.


People that toe either party line to the hilt are stupid to me.....because both parties have some fucked up shit inn their platforms in an attempt to get voters.

whottt
09-08-2008, 12:42 AM
BTW...

After watching a Palin debate on C-Span...

And after watching her do some interviews as Governor(including taking phone calls from regular callers and answering any and all questions)...

I have to say that speeches are actually the weakest part of her politicial game :lmao

I predict Joe Biden will drop out before this race is over...I actually feel sorry for him that he's going to have to debate her. I'm serious. Even Biden doesn't deserve this...she is going to flay him.



PS: Keep trying to slander her as a hardline crazed pro-lifer...it's going to be funnier than the baby slander backlash was. :lol

SnakeBoy
09-08-2008, 12:43 AM
I am thrilled to have a moderate...and that's what McCain is.



Yep.

whottt
09-08-2008, 12:43 AM
Here's a hint Democrats...why don't ya'll stop slandering and propgandizing and actually attempt being a decent political party. You never know...you might like it.

SnakeBoy
09-08-2008, 12:47 AM
Haven't seen enough of Palin to form a solid opinion. Very conservative on social issues I think but but she seems to have a mean populist streak as well.

hitmanyr2k
09-08-2008, 12:50 AM
D) McCain has a solid -- ROCK SOLID -- history of reaching across the aisle on all manner of issues...Obama is the most liberal (based on voting record) member of either house of Congress. He never reaches across the aisle. Hell, he never reaches beyond his whacko base.


Ignorance. Do a little research before you make yourself look like an idiot....

http://lugar.senate.gov/press/record.cfm?id=278019

"Lugar and Obama traveled together to Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan in August 2005 to oversee a number of Nunn-Lugar projects. Obama and Lugar introduced the legislation in November 2005.

Operative sections of Lugar-Obama became law in January 2007. Later in 2007, Lugar and Obama pressed the Appropriations Committee to provide funding for its implementation.

Senators Obama and Lugar are members of the Foreign Relations Committee. Lugar serves as the Committee’s Ranking Member. Obama is Chairman of the European Affairs Subcommittee."

boutons_
09-08-2008, 04:00 AM
"history of reaching across the aisle on all manner of issues"

Senator McSame, ok. but he votes Repug 90%+ of the time, he's no maverick roaming away from the Repug herd-think.

Candidate McSame, as has been widely noted, has been very different from Senator McSame.

101A
09-08-2008, 07:55 AM
And by "democrats" he means Joe Lieberman, who last ran AGAINST the Democrats as an Independent (though he seemed to conveniently forget this fact when he spoke at the RNC) and doesn't really count as a Dem when you look at his voting record.

THE most important vote of all makes hie a Democrat; the one where he gives them a majority in the Senate; without it, the Republicans would control.

There are more issues than the Iraq war, BTW, on ALL of those Lieberman is a traditional Democrat.

PixelPusher
09-08-2008, 01:01 PM
THE most important vote of all makes hie a Democrat; the one where he gives them a majority in the Senate; without it, the Republicans would control.

There are more issues than the Iraq war, BTW, on ALL of those Lieberman is a traditional Democrat.

Lieberman agrees wholeheartedly with McCain on foreign policy, and that's the only issue McCain really gives a crap about. This is third-hand, so take it for what it's worth, but McCain was described by a fellow Republican as someone who believed in Duty, Honor, Country and pretty much nothing else.

Anti.Hero
09-08-2008, 01:56 PM
lesser of two evils. He'll slow down the European United States of Socialism compared to that big eared fella.

Aggie Hoopsfan
09-08-2008, 05:35 PM
"history of reaching across the aisle on all manner of issues"

Senator McSame, ok. but he votes Repug 90%+ of the time, he's no maverick roaming away from the Repug herd-think.

Candidate McSame, as has been widely noted, has been very different from Senator McSame.

McCain's authored at least one bill that I can think of that was bi-partisan.

Obama's never authored or co-authored a piece of legislation in his time in the Senate. NOTHING. He's co-sponsored some bills, but never authored jack shit. Yep, a guy who wants to be president has never authored or co-authored a single fucking bill.

But this won't matter to you, you're too busy chugging the Obamessiahkoolaid.

Yonivore
09-08-2008, 08:56 PM
I believe Obama has voted with the Democrats 100% of the time.