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John McCain: The Return of the Reformer
By Kenneth P. Vogel, Politico
July 16, 2008
Article Excerpts:
The Republican reformer is back.
After a primary in which John McCain sought to avoid talking about his fight to reduce the role of money
in politics -- an issue that put him at odds with many GOP activists -- the Arizona senator is once
again embracing his campaign finance reform credentials.
It's a central part of McCain's political identity, the genesis of his national profile as a reformer, a
fact highlighted by the attacks he endured during the nomination fight over the sweeping 2002 campaign
finance overhaul that bears his name. Many Republican activists and small-government conservatives
revile the McCain-Feingold reforms as the epitome of big government infringement on free speech, and as
a result they remain leery of McCain today.
But the McCain campaign believes that by carrying the reform mantle in the general election, he will
appeal to independent voters -- and potentially undercut presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama's
change theme.
The first sign of McCain's return to reform came last month, when his campaign debuted a new slogan --
"Reform - Prosperity - Peace" -- that nodded to his leadership in the campaign finance movement. It's a
slogan that McCain himself coined last month, reportedly in an unscripted moment.
Then came the ad. Last week, McCain began an airing a biographical spot touting his leadership on
campaign finance reform foremost among his legislative accomplishments, and he publicly embraced the
groups that supported his efforts.
The television ad begins with his military service and his time as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. When he
got home and entered Congress, the ad's narrator intones, he put his love of country "before party, polls
and self. A maverick. John McCain tackled campaign reform, military reform, spending reform. He took on
presidents, partisans and popular opinion."
He followed up in an interview last week with The New York Times, in which he identified reform-minded
and activist-oriented former President Teddy Roosevelt as his "major role model . . . in the 20th
century."
When pressed about where, in his own record, he advocated an active government role to accomplish
something "in a similar vein" to Roosevelt. McCain had a ready answer.
"Campaign finance reform -- obviously he was a great reformer -- is one of them," McCain responded,
according to a transcript on the Times website. "Climate change is another. He was a great
environmentalist."
McCain recently even managed to upstage Barack Obama, whose campaign is powered by his image as an agent
of change. Last week, McCain's campaign was the first to agree to volunteer more information about
bundlers and small donors in response to a request from eight nonprofit groups that supported
McCain-Feingold and other reforms championed by McCain.
"We would like to thank you for your organizations' admirable efforts in promoting transparency and
accountability in the election process," McCain's campaign manager, Rick Davis, wrote in a letter to the
groups explaining how McCain planned to step up his disclosure. "As you well know, John McCain has been a
tireless crusader for campaign finance reform for many years. Our campaign has worked hard to embody
Senator McCain's commitment to transparency and accountability in the political process." . . .
The McCain campaign rejects the premise that he's repositioning himself on campaign finance issues,
insisting that the senator never distanced himself from McCain-Feingold or his other efforts to tighten
campaign rules.
"John McCain was attacked so much for it in the primary -- how could he forget?" said Brian Rogers, a
spokesman for McCain. He asserted McCain's leadership on the issue would help him with independent
voters inspired by the idea of a new politics that transcends partisan divisions.
"John McCain has always emphasized his long record of putting principle over party and politics to do
what's right for America," Rogers said. "Campaign finance is a perfect example of this."
Indeed, during the 2000 presidential primaries. McCain and fellow underdog Bill Bradley, a former New
Jersey senator who was seeking the Democratic nomination, got surprising traction running on
reform-oriented platforms.
Though both lost their respective nomination fights, the idea that special interest cash was corrupting
Washington emerged as a prominent theme, which in turn provided momentum for McCain's efforts in the
Senate to ban huge, so-called soft money contributions.
Yet this time around, McCain's rhetoric critical of special interests hasn't been nearly as strident or
prominent as in 2000, instead taking a back seat to his campaign's focus on national security and the
economy.
But in a general election in which polls suggest deep dissatisfaction with the president and Congress --
not to mention the government's handling of gas prices, the economy and the war in Iraq -- reform
rhetoric may resonate with independent and swing voters. . . .
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the entire article.
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