John McCain
69 Days to Decide: McCain Beats Back Hayworth in GOP Primary, Holds Senate Seat
Sen. John McCain fended off Republican challenger J.D. Hayworth in the Arizona Senate primary Tuesday, virtually assuring he'll keep his seat in November despite signs earlier in the year that an anti-Washington wave could wipe out one of Capitol Hill's most influential leaders.
Hayworth at one point in the campaign seemed poised to leverage Tea Party support and give McCain a run for his political life. Outsider challenges had already led to the primary defeats for Republican Utah Sen. Bob Bennett and Democratic Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, and McCain was potentially vulnerable nearly two years after losing the 2008 presidential election to Barack Obama.
But Hayworth struggled to build his anti-establishment credentials and seriously erode McCain's popularity in the polls. Though Hayworth slammed McCain for voting for the Wall Street bailout and allegedly being soft on illegal immigration, McCain worked hard to show he was tough on border security...
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Election 2010: Independent Voters Sour on Obama, Pro-Abortion Democrats
Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- A weekend poll shows independent voters are souring on President Barack Obama and his pro-abortion Democratic colleagues who control the House and Senate. A new Associated Press-GfK poll has good news for pro-life advocates hoping to retake Congress or lessen the pro-abortion advantage.
In 2008, 52 percent of independents backed Obama over his presidential rival John McCain, but that has changed now that they have endured two years of his aggressive pro-abortion agenda.
Only 32 percent of those who do not declare themselves either Republicans or Democrats now say they support Obama and wants Democrats to keep control of Congress. And 67 percent say they believe the country is headed in the wrong direction -- never a good sign for those in power...
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Tunnel to Nowhere Among Millions Wasted in Stimulus Spending, Senate GOP Report Says
Washington (CNSNews.com) – The federal government is spending $62 million on a tunnel to nowhere in Pittsburgh, Pa., $89,000 on a sidewalk that leads to a ditch in Boynton, Okla., and almost $200,000 to study voter perception of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, better known as the stimulus act, from which these other projects are funded.
That’s according to a report released on Tuesday by the offices of Republican Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma. Both Coburn and McCain, the Republican presidential nominee in 2008, opposed the stimulus bill backed by President Barack Obama.
The $862-billion stimulus bill was signed into law by Obama in February 2009...
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Left, right brace for voters' anti-incumbent anger
With voters across the country embracing "outsiders" — from "tea party" candidate Rand Paul in Kentucky on the right to Pennsylvania Rep. Joe Sestak on the left — incumbents in both parties face a long, hot summer of trying to save their jobs.
From Sen. John McCain of Arizona to Rep. Charles B. Rangel of New York, high-profile lawmakers in both parties are girding to fend off the anti-establishment anger voters displayed in Tuesday's hotly contested primaries.
Mr. McCain is polling comfortably ahead of GOP primary opponent J.D. Hayworth, but Mr. McCain's staff shake-ups and some rightward policy shifts on issues including immigration indicate unease nonetheless...
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Senators demand Guard troops on border
Arizona's two senators on Monday said violence has skyrocketed on the U.S.-Mexico border, and called on President Obama to deploy National Guard troops, finish building 700 miles of fence and add 3,000 new Border Patrol agents to the region by 2015.
Sens. John McCain and Jon Kyl, both Republicans, said the National Guard deployment -- which they said was effective four years ago when President George W. Bush ordered a similar deployment -- should last until the governor of Arizona certifies the government has operational control of the border.
"The situation has spiraled out of control," Mr. McCain said. Of those caught crossing the border illegally, he said, 17 percent are found to have committed crimes in Arizona previously...
Healthcare reform vote: Which Democrats are most vulnerable?
Washington – Remember Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky?
Anyone over a certain age who follows politics does. She was the first-term Democratic congresswoman from Pennsylvania who cast the decisive 218th House vote for President Clinton’s budget reconciliation bill in 1993 – and then went on to lose reelection in 1994.
Today, as the Democrats work to lock down just enough votes to pass an unpopular healthcare reform bill, “MMM” isn’t far from thought. No one wants to be the MMM of 2010. But there are several who could suffer that fate.
One obvious place to look is the 49 Democrats elected in 2008 from districts that voted for Republican John McCain for president...
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Hayworth to battle 'moderate' McCain
After coming within a few million votes of the presidency, John McCain is suddenly facing the toughest re-election fight of his nearly 24-year Senate career.
Former Rep. J.D. Hayworth is slated Monday to kick off his campaign for the U.S. Senate with a three-day, 10-city tour across Arizona. Mr. Hayworth, 51, a favorite of the insurgent "tea party" movement and a border-security hawk, is running as a younger, brasher, more conservative alternative to Mr. McCain, who turns 74 a few days after the Republican Party's Aug. 24 primary.
"I have a lot of respect for John McCain - he's served this nation admirably - but this is about policy," Mr. Hayworth said in a telephone interview. "Although he describes himself as a maverick, he's really a moderate. So many people have reached out to me and said, 'Please, we need a conservative senator.'"....
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McCain, Inhofe Oppose Repealing ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell'
(CNSNews.com) – Two Republican members of the Senate Armed Services Committee told CNSNews.com that the “don’t ask, don’t tell” (DADT) policy concerning homosexuals serving in the military has worked and should not be repealed at this time. Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), however, said that his “intuition” told him that changing the policy would help military recruitment.
Under "don't ask, don't tell" the military does not ask new recruits (as it once did) to certify that they are not homosexual. However, it remains illegal and a cause for separation from the service to engage in homosexual activity while serving in the military.
At the U.S. Capitol last week, CNSNews.com asked Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, “Will officially allowing gays in the military affect recruitment?”
McCain said, “I’m not sure. I do know that the ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy has worked very well. read more »
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Republicans threaten health care read-a-thon
WASHINGTON – Republicans threatened to delay Senate business with a health care read-a-thon this weekend as Democrats searched for 60 votes to advance President Barack Obama's signature issue. A forecast of heavy snow added to the list of complications.
At a news conference Friday in the Capitol, Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., accused Democrats of trying to ram the health care bill through with dozens of changes as yet unseen, and promised to do all they could to prevent it.
"I think we've made it rather clear we're not going to expedite consideration of the health care bill," McConnell said.
Added McCain: "I don't think it would be outrageous to ask for a bill that we haven't seen to be read"...
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McCain Says Health Care Bill Would Face Constitutional Challenge
(Washington, D.C.) -- Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) predicted on Thursday that there will be a constitutional challenge to the provision in the health care bill under consideration in Congress that would require all Americans to buy health insurance. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the federal government has never before mandated that Americans purchase any good or service.
When asked by CNSNews.com on Thursday where in the Constitution is Congress given the authority to mandate that people buy health insurance, McCain said, “That is an excellent question and I’m sure that if they pass health care legislation, I think there would be a challenge”...
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