Posted on 05/14/2008 9:20:57 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
COLUMBUS, Ohio - John McCain, looking through a crystal ball to 2013 and the end of a prospective first term, sees "spasmodic" but reduced violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden dead or captured and government spending curbed by his ready veto pen.
The Republican presidential contender also envisions April's annual angst replaced by a simpler flat tax, illegal immigrants living humanely under a temporary worker program, and political partisanship stemmed by weekly news conferences and British-style question periods with joint meetings of Congress.
In a speech being delivered Thursday, McCain concedes he cannot make the changes alone, but he wants to outline a specific governing style to show the accomplishments it can achieve.
"I'm not interested in partisanship that serves no other purpose than to gain a temporary advantage over our opponents. This mindless, paralyzing rancor must come to an end. We belong to different parties, not different countries," McCain says in remarks prepared for delivery in the capital city of Ohio, a general election battleground. "There is a time to campaign, and a time to govern. If I'm elected president, the era of the permanent campaign will end; the era of problem solving will begin."
To the disdain of some fellow Republicans, the presumed GOP nominee has worked with Democrats on legislation aimed at overhauling campaign finance regulations, redrafting immigration rules and regulations and implementing government spending controls.
While that has cultivated a maverick image for McCain, the Arizona senator has also been accused of exhibiting a nasty temper swearing even at fellow lawmakers from his own party and unabashed partisanship.
In particular, McCain has clashed with the leading Democratic presidential contender, Barack Obama. After tangling with the Illinois senator on lobbying reforms, McCain questioned Obama's integrity in a publicly released 2006 letter.
McCain wrote he had thought Obama's interest in ethics legislation "was genuine and admirable," before adding: "Thank you for disabusing me of such notions." He accused Obama of "partisan posturing."
While calling for Congress to drop mindless partisanship, McCain also chided the media with whom he has enjoyed a generally positive relationship for fueling contention with its campaign coverage.
"Campaigns and the media collaborated as architects of the modern presidential campaign, and we deserve equal blame for the regret we feel from time to time over its less-than-inspirational features," he said.
In outlining potential achievements of a first term, the 71-year-old McCain implicitly was suggesting he would seek a second term, an attempt to mute suggestions he would serve only four years after being the oldest president ever to take office for a first term.
In particular, he sees a world in which:
"The Iraq war has been won. Iraq is a functioning democracy, although still suffering from the lingering effects of decades of tyranny and centuries of sectarian tension. Violence still occurs, but it is spasmodic and much reduced."
The Taliban threat in Afghanistan has been greatly reduced.
"The increase in actionable intelligence that the counterinsurgency produced led to the capture or death of Osama bin Laden, and his chief lieutenants," McCain said. "There still has not been a major terrorist attack in the United States since Sept. 11, 2001."
A "League of Democracies" has supplanted a failed United Nations to apply sanctions to the Sudanese government and halt genocide in Darfur.
The United States has had "several years of robust growth," appropriations bills free of lawmakers' pet projects known as "earmarks," public education improved by charter schools, health care improved by expansion of the private market and an energy crisis stemmed through the start of construction on 20 new nuclear reactors.
Democrats are asked to serve in his administration, he holds weekly news conferences and, like the British prime minister, answers questions publicly from lawmakers.
McCain also pledges to halt a Bush administration practice of enacting laws with accompanying signing statements that exempt the president from having to enforce parts he finds objectionable.
"I will respect the responsibilities the Constitution and the American people have granted Congress," the senator said, "and will, as I often have in the past, work with anyone of either party to get things done for our country."
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He will Respect the Constitution? LOLOL
and I have no doubt he will work with anyone.. anyone..
I know it’s not popular here, but if all he did for illegals was give them a better guest worker program, I’d be fine with it — so long as they had to go home first, and others waiting in line got to use the new program first.
.....and if they went back to Mexico once the harvest ended. (fat chance)
I hear what you are saying, however, that ain’t what was or likely will be proposed next time is my hunch, and there will be a next time.
I want some of whatever this author was smokin’...
Like it or not, this vision is worlds better than what we’d get from Barry O.
His vision is so much hot air, imo.
Methinks many here willfully confuse a mirage with a vision.
His vision is so much hot air, imo.
Methinks many here willfully confuse a mirage with a vision.
IF we're to import workers, why not educated, skilled workers who want to be part of America? We could even use the resultant brain-drain to a strategic advantage. China can't conquer space without engineers, and Iran can't build a bomb without physicists.
We don’t have enough ignorant people here who want to do the unskilled jobs.
Our current unemployment is around 8 million.
There are an estimated minimum of 12 million illegals.
So even presuming the 8 million unemployed would do menial labor, which is most certainly not the case, if you got rid of 12 million illegals, you’d have 4 million unskilled jobs unfilled.
We could raise the pay until it inticed people into the work force, but then you’d pay double for your big mac, and it wouldn’t be worth it.
A good guest worker program would provide openings for all people, and would emphasize getting people skilled in the jobs we have, and also ensure that people who came also left when the job was done.
As to skilled labor, we have a lot of skilled labor already in this country, many of whom are having trouble getting jobs as they are being shipped oversea. I’m wary of agreeing that we need to import a lot more skilled workers, until I’m more certain we have given citizens who ahve those skills a shot at the jobs.
That’s been the problem, the initial proposals and explanations have always been a little more palatable than what actually made it into the legislation.
It’s why people like me who were in the center on the issue ended up being staunch supporters of the anti-illegal movement. The Senate bill was crap.
“I will respect the responsibilities the Constitution”
Following McCain/Feingold...can’t say he doesn’t have ba!!s.
Sorry, John, but the Democrats play to win. They will roll over you and not look back. Other than their tired rhetoric, they really have no desire to play nice.
And you're a wimp.
Everyone here knows exactly who and exactly what that backstabbing creep is. About half of us are actively lying to ourselves that once rewarded with the Presidency, “why...he wouldn’t stab us in the back AGAIN.....would he?”
You err by taking "want" into account. We have hordes of worthless losers who are in prison or are 6th generation welfare recipients. I propose they work or they starve.
tagline change
Such a creative idea would be too far-reaching an idea for the stupid and appallingly lazy crew in Congress, of course. Isn't its approval rating in the same category as that of GWB? Where's the driveby with that statistic?
Regards . . . Penny
Interesting idea, to use prison labor.
I think prison labor is already used in some states, maybe in most, to do state maintenance items.
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