A McCain flip-flop two-fer

Just last week, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) told Roger Simon that he’d consider a kind of redeploy-to-perimeter strategy in Iraq if the latest escalation fails. While acknowledging that “there are no good options,” McCain said one scenario would “to withdraw to the borders (of Iraq) to try to keep other countries from interfering. Maintaining our bases in Kuwait and other places.” It was at least a little encouraging — McCain suddenly seemed open to something resembling a redeployment plan.

Last night, as McCain is inclined to do, he reversed course entirely, telling CNN that he prefers an open-ended commitment.

It didn’t take long for McCain to backtrack from redeployment. Last night, in an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, McCain said under no scenario would he consider withdrawing troops, even if escalation fails. He said he would only consider it when “we have the situation under control.”

So, last week McCain is open to redeployment; this week he isn’t. Next week, who knows? For a guy who has this much trouble with being consistent, anything’s possible. Maybe the various McCains can have a debate and let us know what the senator’s position is after they’re done.

Better yet, this CNN interview was actually a flip-flop two-fer.

In the interview, McCain also said Vice President Cheney was wrong to state that there have been enormous successes in Iraq. McCain claimed he has “bitterly disagreed” with the “failed strategy” for more than three years. In fact, here’s what he said approximately a year ago: “I think the situation on the ground is going to improve. I do think that progress is being made in a lot of Iraq. Overall, I think a year from now, we will have made a fair amount of progress if we stay the course. If I thought we weren’t making progress, I’d be despondent.”

Of course, you know what this means…

…it’s time to update the big list. We are now up to a whopping 17 John McCain Flip-Flops.

* In 2006, McCain sponsored legislation to require grassroots lobbying coalitions to reveal their financial donors. In 2007, after receiving “feedback” on the proposal, McCain told far-right activist groups that he now opposes the measure.

* McCain said before the war in Iraq, “We will win this conflict. We will win it easily.” Four years later, McCain said he knew all along that the war in Iraq war was “probably going to be long and hard and tough.”

* McCain went from saying he would not support repeal of [tag]Roe v. Wade[/tag] to saying the exact opposite.

* McCain went from saying gay marriage should be allowed, to saying gay marriage shouldn’t be allowed.

* McCain criticized TV preacher [tag]Jerry Falwell[/tag] as “an agent of intolerance” in 2002, but has since decided to cozy up to the man who said Americans “deserved” the 9/11 attacks. (Indeed, McCain has now hired Falwell’s debate coach.)

* McCain used to oppose Bush’s [tag]tax cuts[/tag] for the very wealthy, but he reversed course in February.

* In 2000, McCain accused Texas businessmen Sam and Charles Wyly of being corrupt, spending “dirty money” to help finance Bush’s presidential campaign. McCain not only filed a complaint against the Wylys for allegedly violating campaign finance law, he also lashed out at them publicly. In April, McCain reached out to the Wylys for support.

* McCain supported a major campaign-finance reform measure that bore his name. In June, he abandoned his own legislation.

* McCain used to think that Grover Norquist was a crook and a corrupt shill for dictators. Then McCain got serious about running for president and began to reconcile with Norquist.

* McCain took a firm line in opposition to torture, and then caved to White House demands.

* McCain opposed a holiday to honor Martin Luther King, Jr., before he supported it. [corrected]

* McCain was against presidential candidates campaigning at Bob Jones University before he was for it.

* McCain was anti-ethanol. Now he’s pro-ethanol.

* McCain was both for and against state promotion of the Confederate flag.

* McCain decided in 2000 that he didn’t want anything to do with former Secretary of State Henry [tag]Kissinger[/tag], believing he “would taint the image of the ‘Straight Talk Express.'” Kissinger is now the Honorary Co-Chair for his presidential campaign in New York.

* McCain is now both open and closed to redeployment in Iraq.

* And McCain claims to have “bitterly disagreed” with a “failed strategy” in Iraq for more than three years, despite having argued the need to “stay the course” just one year ago.

Don’t you just love John McCain’s “straight talk”?

Would this be like getting a two-for-one presidency?

  • Yeah, but we’d never know which one was going to show up on any given day. 😉

    The escalation was supposed to be our last chance to get the situation under control, right? So how is it logical to say that even if escalation fails, we still have to stay until the situation is under control?

    I don’t get it. And worse yet, neither does McCain.

  • curmdgeon, your last sentence is the key point: mccain is literally making it up as he goes.

    this is, of course, his modus operandi, and illustrates why he is not capable of being a good president (hell, he’s not capable of being a good senator)….

  • Let’s get McCain to re-affirm his conviction that Bill Clinton should have been impeached as he so eloquently stated for the Congressional Record on February 12, 1999 (which just happened to be Abraham Lincoln’s birthday).

    “…All of my life, I have been instructed never to swear an oath to my country in vain. In my former profession, those who violated their sworn oath were punished severely and considered outcasts from our society. I do not hold the President to the same standard that I hold military officers to. I hold him to a higher standard. Although I may admit to failures in my private life, I have at all times, and to the best of my ability, kept faith with every oath I have ever sworn to this country. I have known some men who kept that faith at the cost of their lives.

    I cannot–not in deference to public opinion, or for political considerations, or for the sake of comity and friendship–I cannot agree to expect less from the President….”

    Just what are those failures in McCain’s private life?

  • The MSM seems to be as firmly disinterested in mentioning “Ping-Pong” McCain’s lapses as they are interested in pushing the 2008 election now (primarily against Hillary). It’s almost as if a preselection has occurred, one that they deem good for their ratings and they don’t want to be deterred by little things like flip-flops or a match-up that would less marketable.

  • Damn, John McCain makes parodies easy.

    The Great Flipflopper (Pretender)
    Oh yes, I’m the great flipflopper
    Pretending I’m a pal of Fallwell
    My want is such; I flipflop too much
    I say I’m right but no one can tell.

    Oh yes, I’m the great flipflopper
    Spinning in a world of my own
    I play the game; but I have no shame
    You’ve left me to dangle all alone.

    Too real is this feeling of selling out
    Too real when I feel what flipflops can’t conceal.

    Oh yes I’m the great flipflopper
    Just laughing and hanging with clowns
    I say to be what is not; you see
    I’m wearing my goal like a crown
    Pretending the Express is still straight

    Too real is this feeling of selling out
    Too real what kissing Grover’s ass can’t conceal

    Yes I’m the great flipflopper
    Just laughing and smile like a clown
    I sway to be what I’m not you see
    I’m wearing my goal like a crown
    Pretending the Express is still straight

  • OK, I’m having nightmares about a three-way race for President, McCain vs Clinton vs Lieberman, with about 15 different policy stands shared between them. In the debates, each candidate gets two podiums, and gets time to expound differently at each one. Performers will be scored on speed and agility in shifting positions, degree of reversal while maintaining a straightfaced and convincing expression, and the amount of slime they can get to stick to their opponents for holding an opinion that they themselves supported in the past.

  • It is postings such as “Turd World” #3, that confirms my feeling that the psychotic rantings and smear/accusation style of the wingnuts justifies their image as lunatics.

  • We need to strap some magnets onto McCain and see how much energy he generates if he stands near a power pole while he’s telling us his “steadfast” positions. The man’s not flipflopping, he’s spinning so fast he might melt the wires.

  • It’s obvious: Senator John McCain, in an all-out campaign to become the next president of these United States, would do and say anything to get elected president with his audience-specific messages that, although contradictory, he believes those specific audiences want to hear. It seems he is completely unaware that video clips recording such audience-specific quotes for posterity would come to haunt him by his political opponents’ use of such video clips in campaign ads.

    Let the 2008 presidential campaigns begin in earnest and may the truly deserving candidate win!!

  • Over my 79 years, I have heard many people who were running to become the presidential nominee described as one who will say or do anything to become president. I have never before seen anyone who this so describes as John McCain.

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