Running WildThe McCain campaign is trying to get serious—if only the candidate would grow upThis article is from the July/August issue of Radar Magazine. For a risk-free issue, click here.
CHARM OFFENSIVE John McCain waves to the crowd after addressing the League of United Latin American Citizens (Photo: Getty images) In the past year, McCain has dropped his opposition to George Bush's tax cuts; he's embraced the Christian right; he's remained stubbornly supportive of the Iraq war. Yet we tend to cover him as though he doesn't really mean any of it. His missteps—confusing Sunnis and Shi'ites, making an impolitic musical joke about bombing Iran, or admitting with a wink that he doesn't know jack about economics—don't get the kind of red-siren gaffe-tastic coverage as those of other politicians. Why? Because McCain's constant, almost obsessive level of press access gives the media a depth of knowledge about him that makes playing "gotcha" feel, well, as trivial as it probably should in all cases. Also, the McCain show is a good deal more fun to watch than Gigli.
PHONING IT IN McCain appears on-screen during April's CMT Awards (Photo: Getty images) Like in April, when McCain started a tour that would take him to several of the poorest communities in America—places that, as a staffer put it, "Republicans won't go." I went along. |
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