Everyone, it
seems, is taking jabs at John McCain these days, from a
Republican rival for the presidential nomination challenging
his stand on same-sex marriage to several
potential Democratic candidates questioning his
position on the Iraq war. "When you're the perceived
front-runner, your head's above the political trench, and
everyone takes shots at you," said Chris Lehane, a
Democratic strategist and presidential campaign veteran.
McCain, considered by many to be the Republican
to beat, has largely remained silent about the
criticism, which is somewhat uncharacteristic for the
outspoken Arizona senator. His presidential exploratory
committee on Wednesday declined to comment on the
spate of reproaches over his stands on same-sex
marriage and the Iraq war.
"He doesn't have to respond yet," said Rich
Galen, a Republican consultant. "If I were advising
McCain, I'd say wait until somebody makes a dent."
No doubt the assailing of McCain is only just
beginning, and he surely won't let the charges go
unanswered indefinitely. The first primary contests
are still a year away, and the general election isn't until
November 2008. Still, attacking McCain, a political
celebrity, this early allows lesser-known prospective
candidates of all political stripes to raise their
profiles and generate media coverage if even for one news cycle.
Republican critics, for their part, aim to chip
away at McCain's credentials and raise questions about
his positions to ensure he doesn't solidify his status
as the one to beat. Democratic foes, in the meantime,
go after McCain in hopes of projecting strength and
to show that they can take on the Republican
heavyweight, particularly on the national security
issues that are considered McCain's forte.
The 2006 midterm campaign was barely over when a
potential aspirant for the GOP presidential
nomination, Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, called
McCain "disingenuous" on same-sex marriage. McCain has
irked social conservatives with his opposition to a federal
constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. He says
the issue should be left to the states.
"I believe in the sanctity and unique role of
marriage between man and woman, but I certainly don't
believe in discriminating against any American,"
McCain said in November. He added: "I believe that gay
marriage should not be legal."
Seeking to be seen as more conservative than
McCain on issues dear to the right flank, Romney
seized on the comments, saying: "That's his position,
and in my opinion, it's disingenuous.
"Look, if somebody says they're in favor of gay
marriage, I respect that view. If someone says, like I
do, that I oppose same-sex marriage, I respect that
view. But those who try and pretend to have it both ways, I
find it to be disingenuous," Romney added.
Never mind that Romney's own position on
same-sex marriage has been questioned in recent weeks
after a 1994 letter surfaced from his unsuccessful
U.S. Senate challenge to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in
Massachusetts. In it, Romney pledged to be more effective in
promoting gay issues than the liberal senator.
More recently, Democrats who are running for
president have assailed McCain over his call for
President Bush to send tens of thousands more U.S.
troops to Iraq, a stance that conflicts sharply with public
opinion about the unpopular war. Just after announcing
a second presidential run last week, former North
Carolina senator John Edwards criticized McCain's
position on Iraq and gave it a name.
"It would be an enormous mistake to adopt the
McCain doctrine and escalate the war," Edwards said in
Iowa, the first state to hold a presidential caucus.
He later added that while he knows and likes McCain,
he believes the senator is "dead wrong."
A few weeks earlier, Iowa governor Tom Vilsack
made the same argument in New Hampshire, home to the
nation's first primary, during his campaign kickoff,
saying: "I fundamentally disagree with Senator McCain on
this. I think he is wrong. We cannot afford to make a big
mistake bigger." Vilsack also sent a letter to that
effect to McCain.
And New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, a
Democrat who is considering a presidential run, has
weighed in as well. In a speech in New Hampshire last
month, he said McCain's plan would only provoke sectarian
violence. "There is no military solution. There's got
to be a political solution," Richardson said. (Liz
Sidoti, AP)
Viral post saying Republicans 'have two daddies now' has MAGA hot and bothered