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Friday, January 18, 2008
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
Fact-Checking the Straight-Talk
by George Will
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Who should John McCain pick as his running mate?














WASHINGTON -- In 2004, one of John McCain's closest associates, John Weaver, spoke to John Kerry about the possibility of McCain running as Kerry's vice presidential running mate. In "No Excuses," Bob Shrum's memoir of his role in numerous presidential campaigns, including Kerry's, Shrum writes that Weaver assured Kerry that "McCain was serious about the possibility of teaming up with him," and Kerry approached McCain. He, however, was more serious about seeking the 2008 Republican nomination.

But was it unreasonable for Kerry to think McCain might be comfortable on a Democratic ticket? Not really.

In ABC's New Hampshire debate, McCain said: "Why shouldn't we be able to reimport drugs from Canada?" A conservative's answer is:

That amounts to importing Canada's price controls, a large step toward a system in which some medicines would be inexpensive but many others -- new pain-relieving, life-extending pharmaceuticals -- would be unavailable. Setting drug prices by government fiat rather than market forces results in huge reductions of funding for research and development of new drugs. McCain's evident aim is to reduce pharmaceutical companies' profits. But if all those profits were subtracted from the nation's health care bill, the pharmaceutical component of that bill would be reduced only from 10 percent to 8 percent -- and innovation would stop, taking a terrible toll in unnecessary suffering and premature death. When McCain explains that trade-off to voters, he will actually have engaged in straight talk.

There are decent, intelligent people who believe that equity or efficiency or both are often served by government setting prices. In America, such people are called Democrats.

Because McCain is a "maverick" -- the media encomium reserved for Republicans who reject important Republican principles -- he would be a conciliatory president. He has indeed worked with Ted Kennedy on immigration reform, with Russ Feingold on restricting political speech (McCain-Feingold) and with Kennedy and John Edwards -- a trial lawyer drawn to an enlargement of opportunities for litigation -- on the "patients' bill of rights."

McCain is, however, an unlikely conciliator because he is quick to denigrate the motives, and hence the characters, of those who oppose him. He promiscuously accuses others of "corruption," the ubiquity of which he says justifies McCain-Feingold's expansive government regulation of the quantity, timing and content of campaign speech.

McCain says he would nominate Supreme Court justices similar to Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, John Roberts and Sam Alito. But how likely is he to nominate jurists who resemble those four: They consider his signature achievement constitutionally dubious. Continued...

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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Subject: Phil No hatchet throwing
but what about McCains position on global warming?

I've read an op-ed on his campaign site that was published in a major media outlet it certainly sounded like government coerceion for changing the way American Corporations would opperate in the future.

Although there are several "hatchet" attacks on McCain. There are legitimate and reasonable questions as to his approach to solving problems through regulatory expansion.

For me looking at almost every one of the key issues on his own campaign site there are a multitude of items that seem to call for the increase of gov. control over the private sector

I've seen your arguments for McCain. I agree with you That McCain has some great credentials . However for you just to cite the more extreme examples that question McCain seems to me to be not much better then those who exagerate McCains more "extreme" positions.

McCain Wins S.C. Primary
John McCain wins the South Carolina primary. Unlike any other Republican candidate for President, John McCain can and will win in November. Only phony conservatives such as the bow tied, disingenuous George Will can stand in the way of Republicans uniting behind someone of whom every Republican should be proud.
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