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McCain Speaks at Clinton Initiative
By Michael D. Shear, Washington Post
September 25, 2008
Article Excerpts:
NEW YORK -- The morning after he declared he would suspend his presidential campaigning and return to
Washington to deal with the U.S. economic crisis, Sen. John McCain made one last campaign stop, speaking
at a conference on global issues organized by former president Bill Clinton.
Addressing his dramatic call for a pause in the intense presidential campaign, McCain said he intends to
"join" the debate in Washington over how to address the meltdown in the country's financial institutions.
"I cannot carry on a campaign as though this dangerous situation had not occurred, or as though a
solution were at hand, which it clearly is not," McCain said. "With so much on the line, for America and
the world, the debate that matters most right now is taking place in the United States Capitol -- and I
intend to join it. Senator Obama is doing the same. America should be proud of the bipartisanship we are
seeing." . . .
Following McCain's visit to the conference, called the Clinton Global Initiative, the Republican nominee
is scheduled to return to Washington and his Senate office to begin discussions about the economic
rescue package.
Later in the afternoon, McCain and his rival, Sen. Barack Obama, are scheduled to meet at the White
House with President Bush and congressional leaders.
"This kind of cooperation has made all the difference at crucial turns in our history," McCain said. "It
has given us hope in difficult times. It has moved America forward, through all adversity. And now, in
this crisis, we must work together again and put our country first." . . .
McCain declared his support for efforts to combat global warming . . . "To make the great turn away from
carbon-emitting fuels, we will need all the inventive genius of which America is capable," he said. "We
will need as well an economy strong enough to support our nation's great shift toward clean energy."
He pledged support for the organization's efforts to combat malaria, saying that "should I be elected, I
will build on these and other initiatives to ensure that malaria kills no more."
McCain promised that as president he will work to improve world health and combat AIDS, in part by
promoting free trade and ending unfair subsidies for medicine and other goods. . . .
Clinton introduced McCain by saying that he "could never have known the circumstances that would be
present today, with an American financial system teetering and under assault." . . .
And Clinton gave McCain credit for being willing to examine the issue of global warming when many in his
party did not believe that it was a danger to the future.
"When most people in his party were thinking that global warming was overstated and maybe even a
myth . . . he decided to look into it," Clinton said.
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