Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McCain. Show all posts
Sunday, March 09, 2008
McCain Flashes Temper on Kerry Questions
Republican Senator John McCain, showing a flash of the temper he is known for, repeatedly cut off a reporter Friday when asked whether he had spoken to Democratic Senator John Kerry about being his vice president in 2004. McCain told the reporter that everybody knows that he had a private conversation. The reporter, Elisabeth Bumiller of The New York Times, was following up on a question McCain had answered at a campaign event Friday morning in Atlanta. Asked if he might consider Kerry as a running mate, since Kerry asked him in 2004, McCain said no. Afterward, on a campaign flight, Bumiller said she looked in The Times' archives and that McCain had denied talking with Kerry in a May 2004 story. There's a lot of digging for dirt going on in these campaigns. I think just because McCain has won enough delegates to be the Republican choice to run for President, it won't make him immune to them trying everything they can to make him look bad. I've seen the Democratic front runners lose their tempers too.
Friday, February 15, 2008
Romney Endorses John McCain
Republican campaign dropout Mitt Romney endorsed John McCain for the party's presidential nomination and asked his national convention delegates to swing behind the likely nominee. "Even when the contest was close and our disagreements were debated, the caliber of the man was apparent," the former Massachusetts governor said, standing alongside his one-time rival at his now defunct campaign's headquarters. This is a man capable of leading our country at a dangerous hour," said Romney
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
MCain Loses 2008 Campaign Aides
Two top aides on the 2008 White House campaign team of Republican Arizona Senator John McCain have quit. Their departure, coming a week after the shake-up of his campaign following disappointing fundraising results, is likely to be a blow for Mr. McCain. He has been trailing in polls to former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.
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