Last week, Carly Fiorina, a leading McCain advisor/surrogate and the Republican National Committee’s “Victory Chairman,” was discussing consumer-driven health insurance when she proposed “a real, live example which I’ve been hearing a lot about from women: There are many health insurance plans that will cover Viagra but won’t cover birth-control medication. Those women would like a choice.” When reporters asked McCain if he agrees with his top advisor, the senator was hopelessly lost.
It looks like Fiorina put McCain in yet another difficult spot this week.
In an interview, Carly Fiorina, a top adviser, explains that any tax increases on “middle- and working-class” Americans are off limits. She says if a bipartisan coalition is “creative enough” to fashion tax increases on wealthier Americans, that may prove palatable.
As Ben Smith put it, “Grover Norquist, call your office.”
It’s hard to know what to think about something like this. Fiorina is one of McCain’s top advisors, and a leading McCain campaign surrogate. Campaigns are pretty selective about who gets to speak on McCain’s behalf on “Meet the Press,” and yet, there was Fiorina yesterday, repeating demonstrably false talking points for a national television audience.
So, is Fiorina straying from the script and publicly disagreeing with the campaign because she genuinely thinks her preferred candidate is wrong, or is this some kind of clumsy effort to make McCain take both sides of every issue?
If Fiorina’s comments are accurate — the article includes a paraphrase; it’s possible the article is misleading — it steps all over the entire McCain campaign’s message. Obama is saying a tax increase on the wealthiest Americans is the only responsible move. One of McCain’s top advisors is effectively conceding that Obama is right.
In case there’s any doubt, McCain’s message is the polar opposite. In fact, in March, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos asked McCain if he were a “‘read my lips’ candidate, no new taxes, no matter what?” referring to George H.W. Bush’s 1988 pledge. “No new taxes,” McCain responded.
“But under circumstances would you increase taxes?” Stephanopoulos continued. “No,” McCain answered.
And yet, here’s Fiorina, delivering a very different message, either accidentally or deliberately.
So, on the one hand we have a Democratic campaign who believes bipartisan support for responsible tax increases on the wealthy would serve the nation’s interests. And on the other hand, we have a Republican campaign that believes the Democratic campaign is probably right.
Either McCain has to stop attacking Obama, or he’ll have to start attacking his own advisor.
Note to media outlets: this is what’s called a “news story.” Get to work.