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Politics : PRESIDENT JOHN McCAIN

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From: bentway3/18/2007 1:45:37 PM
   of 16
 
McCain: I'm ready to lead

By ERIC MOSKOWITZ
Monitor staff

March 18. 2007 10:00AM

Preston Gannaway / Monitor Staff
Presidential candidate Sen. John McCain tries to decide which beer to sample during a stop at Capitol Conveinience yesterday on St. Patrick's Day. After visiting a house party in Bow, McCain droped by to see store clerk Mary Hill.

Senator John McCain, winner of the 2000 Republican presidential primary, returned to New Hampshire yesterday to reintroduce himself to voters as a candidate for the White House. McCain said dramatic changes since his last campaign have made the 2008 election even more important - and convinced him that he is more ready to be president.

"My life has prepared me to lead this nation," McCain said last night at a house party in Bow, setting up a line he used repeatedly yesterday: "I don't need any on-the-job training."

McCain said his experience - in the House and Senate, and as a Vietnam combat veteran and former prisoner of war - has prepared him to lead in the new environment. Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he said, the United States has been engaged in "a titanic struggle between everything we stand for and believe in" and an "implacable enemy."

At the same time, McCain did not pin the notion of his readiness strictly to military and geopolitical affairs. At a pair of town hall meetings, he spent more time talking about his plans to reform immigration, rein in federal spending and address climate change than he did on the Iraq war. He also stressed his love for New Hampshire's traditional leadoff primary and vowed to keep it first, to preserve the retail politics and human interaction it brings to the presidential election process.

As president, "I will do everything in my power to preserve the first-in-the-nation status of New Hampshire," he told a crowd of over 200 at a school gymnasium in Lebanon yesterday afternoon.

Last time, McCain began with negligible support -"we started out with a 3 percent approval rating, (and) that was in a poll with a 5 percent margin of error" - and held his first New Hampshire campaign event at an American Legion hall, speaking to a handful of veterans. That was long before the "Straight Talk Express," the campaign coach bus that McCain rode to a dizzying number of town meeting stops. His campaign gained momentum through grassroots politicking and continuous touring, with New Hampshire voters embracing McCain as a maverick and candid critic of Washington.
Instead of a rented van, McCain began the 2008 primary season yesterday riding in the "Straight Talk Express," amid a flotilla of vehicles that included a coach to carry national media, a series of staff vans and a dedicated plow truck, which led the way in the snowy early going. He immediately acknowledged the differences between 1999 and 2007, and said he would take nothing for granted this time, despite the elevated status and expectations surrounding his campaign.

"It's really wonderful to be back to see old friends and to get the feeling again for the town-hall meetings," McCain, a fourth-term Arizona senator, told a crowd of about 100 invited guests in Bow at the home of Shawn and Jayne Millerick. "And I also remember we are starting all over, and if anybody doesn't start all over in New Hampshire, it's at great risk to their political future."

McCain beat eventual nominee George W. Bush in New Hampshire in 2000, and he was an early and consistent critic of the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq war. But among the 2008 hopefuls, none right now is more closely linked than McCain to Bush on the war. McCain supports the president's much-debated plan to send more than 21,000 additional troops to Iraq. He spoke carefully about the war at each stop yesterday, never mentioning troop numbers or the word "surge," as the president has characterized his increase. He repeatedly called the war "very badly mismanaged" but was reluctant to dwell on the past.

"We're all sad, we're all frustrated, and we all feel terrible about what has happened over the last four years in Iraq," he said. "But the key to it is to fix it, and that's why I think this is the right strategy now, and I strongly support the president in this strategy. And I don't want to look back in anger, but I do believe that we can succeed."

McCain said the president's plan represents the last possibility for success. It would require using the country's forces not just to fight enemy combatants but to remain in position with U.S. and Iraqi forces to stabilize areas and allow the economic and political process to develop. Although it may not work, the country can't afford not to try, he said.

"When we lost and came home in Vietnam, it was over," he said. But with Islamic terror groups in Iraq, "this is evil that we're facing, and it isn't Iraq they want, it's us they're after. So please have no doubt about what's at stake here."

McCain was critical of the various nonbinding plans debated in Congress about troop levels and withdrawal. If members of Congress believe the war is failing and that it is wasting lives and resources, "they should have the intellectual courage to cut off the funding," he said.

He said he recognized that anti-war sentiment was particularly strong in New Hampshire. However, he disputed the notion that the war was the primary motivation for voters to defeat Republican incumbents here and nationally in the 2006 elections.

"I don't accept that theory," he said. "The reason why Republicans stayed home and Republicans turned against us is that we let spending get out of control, and we spent money like drunken sailors, and we presided over the biggest increase in the size of the government since the Great Society, and it's got to stop."

McCain railed against earmarks - pet spending projects slipped into other legislation - citing a few favorite offenses repeatedly, including $3 million to study the DNA of bears ("I don't know if that was a paternity issue or a criminal issue") and $74 million for peanut storage. He promised to veto the first "pork barrel" bill to reach his desk as president and to go further by embarrassing the author.

"We will stop it, and we will do it by making these people who do it famous," he said.

McCain called for energy independence from fossil fuels. He praised corn-based ethanol - "I have a glass of ethanol every morning before breakfast now, and it is a viable alternative" - but said the country should embrace a range of alternative fuel sources, particularly nuclear energy.

He said he knew little about climate change before his last primary campaign but delved into it after voters in New Hampshire, especially younger ones, brought it to his attention. "Climate change is real. The debate now, I believe, is how serious it is," he said. "And I believe it's important that we give our children and grandchildren a planet that is not one that is in serious danger."

In between his open appearances in Milford and Lebanon, McCain stopped for lunch with his wife, Cindy, and his campaign team at the Chez Vachon diner in Manchester, where they were joined by the city's mayor, Frank Guinta. He also made an unannounced visit to Capitol Convenience in Concord last night, after the Bow party. Steve Duprey, a former state Republican Party chairman and an adviser to McCain, wanted the senator to meet Mary Hill, the store's longtime clerk. Hill, a Republican, is well known in Concord for her affable manner and remarkable memory for the names and faces of customers. She's also received national and international media attention for a continuing friendship with Bill and Hillary Clinton that began during the 1992 primary.

When McCain entered the store, Hill embraced him. "I made a decision that you're my candidate," she said, handing him a card that read "John McCain: An American Hero."

"This is going to put us over the top," McCain said, thanking her for the card. He and his wife sampled beer for St. Patrick's Day - McCain wore a shamrock on the lapel of his bomber jacket yesterday - before stepping outside for a short ride on the Straight Talk Express to the Courtyard by Marriott, where they were scheduled to stay.

While McCain was getting on the bus, Mike Rodriguez - a 22-year-old Marine from Bradford - approached carrying a purple heart certificate, which he received after being wounded in Falluja in 2004. He was eating a burger at the Gaslighter restaurant next door when he saw the McCain bus and ran to his car to get his purple heart folder. "All I want to do is ask if you can do anything if you get in there (as president) to stop more of these from happening," said Rodriguez, a student at Colby-Sawyer.

McCain thanked him for his service, and the two chatted a bit about basic training.

"Well," McCain said, getting ready to board the Straight Talk, "if there's anything I can do for you, let u know."

"Get my boys out," Rodriguez said.

"We will," McCain said.

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