It depends on how you define ‘character and courage’

My single biggest complaint with mainstream political reporting is the he-said, she-said phenomenon. Reporters will let the public know what both sides say about a given issue, but they’re extremely reluctant to let us know when one side is demonstrably wrong. (Fact-checking, apparently, is an example of bias.)

But once in a while, a traditional news outlet will throw us a curveball and report a claim without the he-said, she-said frame — even when should have one.

Consider, for example, this front-page item from Dan Balz in the Washington Post. It notes that John McCain has effectively already won the Republican presidential nomination, so the senator can start planning a general-election strategy. Balz noted, in a matter-of-fact kind of way:

McCain will also run on a biography that has shown character and courage and a willingness to buck convention, and he initially matches up well against both Clinton and Obama, according to the most recent Washington Post-ABC News poll.

I see. It’s not that McCain’s campaign will argue that the senator has “shown character and courage and a willingness to buck convention,” it’s just a factual conclusion that the WaPo runs on the front page. There are no perspectives to the contrary, and no voices that might take issue with the characterization. It’s just presented as an obvious truth.

Except, of course, it’s not really true at all.

Character“?

McCain was still married and living with his wife in 1979 while, according to The New York Times’ Nicholas Kristof, “aggressively courting a 25-year-old woman who was as beautiful as she was rich.” McCain divorced his wife, who had raised their three children while he was imprisoned in Vietnam, then launched his political career with his new wife’s family money. In 2000, McCain managed to deflect media questioning about his first marriage with a deft admission of responsibility for its failure.

Courage“?

This week, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) caved to the right wing and skipped a key vote on the economic stimulus plan, despite voicing prior support for the package. CNN’s Jack Cafferty excoriated McCain for placing his personal ambitions over the public’s well-being:

“It was one of those moments that said quite a bit about somebody’s character. What did McCain do? Nothing. He ducked. Instead of representing the people in Arizona who elected him, he simply choice not to vote at all. John McCain, pilot of the Straight Talk Express, wimped out…. This makes it looks a lot like John McCain wants to be president but he can’t bring himself to do the job of senator. Just another politician choosing to do what’s best for him.”

“It was one of those moments that said quite a bit about somebody’s character,” Cafferty said. “John McCain didn’t have the stomach for the tough decision.”

Jonathan Chait hammered the broader point home with exactly the right media analysis, noting that McCain has made a variety of clearly false claims about the economy, but in those cases, reporters refuse to call him on it.

But character — well, that’s a different story. There reporters feel free to pass off completely subjective judgments as fact. Today’s Washington Post offers a classic example. A front page story reports, “McCain will also run on a biography that has shown character and courage and a willingness to buck convention.” That’s a fact? Doesn’t McCain have critics who think he’s a hypocritical opportunist?

I’m not saying I don’t think McCain has shown character and courage — he has, though other times he’s shown the opposite. But this is a perfect example of a completely subjective judgment passed off as fact. And it shows a major reason why McCain will be such a formidable candidate. McCain is weak on policy but is perceived to have strong personal traits. The rules of the media game thus benefit him enormously.

With McCain on his way to the nomination, and fawning media adulation showing no signs of waning, I get the sense it’s going to be a long year.

The story almost writes itself.

  • Character is an issue that is being completel ignored on the Democratic side of the aisle. And it could be our downfall if we ignore the character issue and nominate Hillary Clinton.

  • I don’t know, CB; if it’s okay to bring up adultery from 1979 as a criticism of his character, isn’t it also okay to bring up being a war hero who survived five years of torture in Vietnam as a rebuttal which pretty much blows away your about McCain’s courage, which is based solely on skipping a single vote (and frankly, can you show me a legislator who has never skipped a vote to avoid taking a position on a controversial issue)? I tend to think that Democrats are better off sticking to the issues and arguing that McCain is too conservative and too close to the current administration rather than going for personal attacks against him based on character issues.

  • Charles Keating will vouch for McCain’s character, he’s a great guy to have around if you get caught robbing a bank.

  • James Dillon, I think that is generally correct with two exceptions:

    1) Flip-flopping. The public is conditioned (by the Republican attacks on Kerry no less – what delightful comeuppance) to think of flip-flopping as a bad thing, and McCain is even more glaring than Romney, even flip-flopping on bills that bear his own name.

    2) Coarseness. His joking about bombing Iran (like GW’s joking about WMD under the cushions) will not go well with a war-weary country, with communities that have lost many sons and daughters. His jokes about teenage Chelsea being ugly will not go well with moms of any partisan affiliation. His swearing at colleagues will scare those who want a little more sanity in charge.

    Those two issues have very recent examples, so it isn’t a historical reach.

  • oh yeah – and Keating 5 – not only fair game, but a perfect play as financial industry meltdowns put the pinch on average Americans. (thanks RacerX!)

  • McCain will also run on a biography that has shown character and courage and a willingness to buck convention,

    Well he has shown those things at times in his life. Just not lately.

  • I really regret that the Republicans didn’t swift-boat mccain during the primaries. I don’t think the Dems will do so during the election.

  • I can see it now: a viagra ad attached to McCain which explains it doesn’t work for every man who uses it….

  • @ 2 and 3:

    You are right of course. The meme that permeates is “experience.”
    Which I think… needs to be spun hard as “corrupt Washington player.”

    @ 6 Zeitgeist:

    All good points but all nullified by the fact that McCain gets a free pass:

    1) By the media
    2) By the fact that the republicans are the de facto leaders in regards to family values, morals, and character. How did they become the de facto leaders? Monica gate. The Dems have never recovered the ground they lost when Clinton’s lies were exposed in such a profound way.

    Which is all to stay: McCain has got a teflon shield. You can’t beat him with negatives.
    Only positives.

  • #4 — Well the POW thing is being brought up whether it’s “OK” or not.

    It’s true, all legislators weasel out of controversial votes. But that doesn’t make them courageous. The notion that it is weasely is a counter-narrative to things like the POW thing (and political things like bucking his party on the campaign finance reform). But the problem is that the counter narrative isn’t being discussed — voters are simply told, as a fact, that McCain is uniformly courageous and noble, and it ain’t true.

  • McCain himself admitted to giving statements and information to his captors. I don’t blame him at all, but that’s not the myth they’re selling.

  • Steve, you’re a bit off base on this one. The courage and character comment is no doubt referenced to Senator McCain’s Vietnam experiences. Please, though other examples exist showing the Senator in a flawed way, you owe it to the discussion to reference the service of this honorable individual.

    I do not support McCain at this juncture, but I would not erase a very important part of the good Senator’s personal narrative. (I will be supporting the Democratic ticket in November.) He was a guest of the Hanoi Hilton, and I submit to you, would you survive with character and courage intact if you too were such a guest at said hotel during the years 1966 – 1972. Without such a reference, obfuscation is effected. -Kevo

  • ***here u are again Anne C***god do we have to endure you till the nominating process is over. Still never miss a chance to smear a Clinton eh? You still try to pass opinion as fact. McCain doesn’t stand a chance to win the WH. The long year will be having to hear all the hypocrisy and lying that will come with a McCain nomination. It will not result in a McCain win.
    Whoever wins the democratic nomination will be the next president no matter who we nominate. We listened to the MSM push the Bush lies and his candidacy before becoming president and we see the result. To watch them do the same with McCain will just be an embarrassment. McCain gets too mad when you call him on a lie and the more he comes before the public the more easily one can see through him…his little smug authoritarian smirk. To watch him being paraded around by the press as some sort of change because of his character will makes us lol. Dems will win the WH in a landslide. Whoever wins the democratic nomination will have the full support of the party. We can’t wait to support either one against this republican disaster as either one is 100X greater than McCain just as the democratic stands on the issues are progressive and designed to pull the country out of this republican disaster. We just can’t wait to get rid of these repukes. and McBush represents the best of the party of hypocrisy and cronyism.

    The press is just now learning how little credibility they have left after the last 8yrs of being stenographers for the Bush administration and how easily they are being replaced by the net. Pushing a McBush candidate on his character and courage to buck the system should push them right over the edge of rational discourse. As pathetic as they want to be.

  • Dale,

    McCain was offered the opportunity to be released early by the Vietnamese, which he refused, insisting that everyone taken prisoner before he was captured be released before him. As a result, he ended up spending another 4 1/2 years as a prisoner of war. That takes more balls than I will quite frankly ever have, as does simply surviving what he went through. Challenging his courage on the basis of skipping a single contested vote in light of that history is simply counterproductive in its absurdity.

    Zeitgeist,
    I agree; he does have some character weaknesses that could be plausibly attacked (who doesn’t?), but I think 1) Democrats need to tread very lightly in that area and choose their attacks carefully, and 2) the points raised by CB in this post are definitely not very strong ones. Kind of like the kindergarten essay attack on Obama, it ends up making McCain look even better if the worst thing you can say about the guy is that he cheated on his wife 29 years ago, and later admitted it and expressed remorse.

  • Which does it take, character or courage, to make jokes about starting another disastrous war?

    John McWarmonger should go sing his “bomb Iran” song for our people stationed in Iraq, who no doubt would laugh their asses off if all the Shiites turned on them and they had their deployments extended indefinitely.

    Character my ass. And courage? Maybe back in ‘Nam. Nowadays he shows how courageous he is by strolling through Baghdad surrounded by 100 Marines. Then he comes back here to lie about how safe it is over there and joke with the wingnuts about how funny it would be to kill thousands of people and make things infinitely worse for our soldiers in Iraq.

  • McCain doesn’t stand a chance to win the WH.

    Yes, lull yourself into this false sense of security. Brilliant.

    I saw this same type of bologna in 2004 when Democrats were absolutely convinced there was no way we could lose because of all of Bush’s bungling.

    Why don’t you just say it will be a cakewalk to the White House where Obama or Clinton will be greeted with flowers?

  • big surprise that memekiller hasn’t chimed in to make excuses for hillary.

    are zeitgeist and memekiller the same poster? sure seemst that way. neither has ever found a clinton scandal they couldn’t defend.

  • I think his age, his oscillation politically and his temper are all good subjects for attack. But I do agree that his POW experience should not be attacked. It smells of swiftboating and frankly make me embarrassed that “my” side is engaging in it. Trying to belittle him for his service to the country only belittles our side.

  • Thia media has gotten one of the candidates (McCain) that they’ve been agitating for during the last several years. He’s good for “newstainment.” Democrats should watch out. Any attacks on the McCain will probably be twisted to obtain a beleaguered noble warrior image for the man.

  • Who the hell is attacking McNutjob’s POW experience? Some anonymous commenters?

    Reading comprehension. Get ya some.

  • I’d argue that it takes a certain amount of character to admit your failed marriage was principally your own fault…

    Of course, it shows a hell of a lot more character to NOT court a significantly younger and richer woman until you’ve discussed with your wife that you don’t think things are working out and you want a divorce.

    Because to court another woman WHILE you’re still married and living with your wife kinda implies you’d be willing to stick with the ol’ ball and chain if things with the new pretty young thing don’t pan out like you’re hoping. Not sure how much character THAT shows.

  • We need to whisper into the reporters ears that McCain will erupt eventually, so pull out those needles. When it happens it won’t get as much coverage as the Howard Dean scream, but it should be fun.

    And you faux-democrat Obama people, this is a post about the real opponents, the Republicans. Jeebus, I’m so tired of the crap from the Hilary-haters that I’m coming to believe that you are all actually Republican trolls. You all hate Hilary, just like the rest of the Republicans, right? We get it, OK?

  • Seems there are about 5 people on this site who got some kind of grant to go around to all the sites just to smear Clintons. They cannot make a single comment without doing so. Mention any topic and they show up with a negative reference to the Clintons. If they are not republican trolls then they missed their calling. Like the guys passing out the beach shoes at the Repub conferences to smack together when Kerry’s name was mentioned and yell flip-flop. It gets so tiresome and distracts from any real discussions of the candidates stands on the issues. The statements they make are right out of a republican playbook and continually get recited here. They appeared on this site when the nominating process got underway.

    When readers try to discover what Obama stands for or get information about him and his comments they are condemned and derided and mention Clinton in a good way and here comes page 22 from the repub handbook. These people are committed to one thing…shutting down discussion or any one who disagrees with them. Says a lot about Obama’s unification call as practiced by his so called supporters. the polls show that both candidates are fairly evenly matched and supported. Discovery is not a smearing process and disagreeing is not a matter of bashing the other candidate. I will vote for whoever wins the nomination but I will not degrade either candidate to help the other win the nomination. I will be glad when the nomination is complete and we have a candidate so all the trolls who suddenly appeared on this site will hopefully disappear just as suddenly…maybe go back to HS or perhaps their smear grant money runs out. Regular commenters to this site know who I’m referring to.

  • Dillon, I agree it doesn’t mitigate McCain’s courage for refusing release even though that was the agreement the POWs had come to as a group and others also refused release.

    The way he has sucked up to Bush and the wingnuts does make me question his courage though. Or maybe just his principles.

  • McCain doesn’t stand a chance to win the WH.

    Unless, of course, there is another terror attack on US soil — like a re-eruption of convincing anthrax letters. Or the authorities somehow discovering a bomb just in time to prevent detonation.

    Or unless there was massive electoral fraud, (such as that made trivially easy by the continued widespread use of electronic voting machines).

    But the current Administration would never be a party to a “staged” act of terrorism just so that the Republicans could cling to power, right? I mean, they have nothing to hide, nothing to fear from an incoming Democratic administration and a properly-functioning DOJ. Right?

    And they’re certainly far too honorable to rig an election. Right?

    Right?

    [crickets]

  • Face it: the media has found a narrative and they will hold onto it. McCain is the media’s first love. McCain will continue to be cast as a “straight-talking Maverick.” Senator Clinton will be described as “attempting to rise above her husband’s scandal-plagued presidency” or Obama will be “naive and inexperienced.”

  • My single biggest complaint with mainstream political reporting is the he-said, she-said phenomenon. Reporters will let the public know what both sides say about a given issue, but they’re extremely reluctant to let us know when one side is demonstrably wrong. (Fact-checking, apparently, is an example of bias.)

    “Fact-checking”, like Dan Rather for one example…so to speak. Steve, your MSM has been carrying the water for your Democratic Party since W was first elected.

    America is at War, and this War will continue until the enemy or America is defeated. Leftists don’t understand this rather simple fact of life, and thusly is the reason that most Americans don’t want another President like Carter or Clinton (Hillary and Obama would be even worse). Here’s a favorite quote of mine:

    Life on Earth is a *LOT* like Life in a Prison… – KarmiCommunist

    Basically, I would say that that means – 1) One can be a ‘Rat’, and let the guards protect him. 2) One can become a ‘Punk’, and let her/his ‘Daddy’ protect her/him. 3) One can stand up on their own, and show some “character and courage”, e.g. McCain. Speaking of McCain, Stratfor has an interesting take (on his soon-to-be-Presidency):

    …This is not a Stratfor endorsement for McCain or a statement of opposition to Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama (so please do not flood us with hate mail); this is an analysis of the proclivities of the U.S. electorate, the quirks of the U.S. electoral system and its impact abroad.

    To be perfectly blunt, the Clinton and Obama campaigns both suffer from eminently exploitable flaws…

    But even if the Clinton and Obama campaigns were not facing such obstacles, McCain would still be the candidate to beat for one reason: The Democrats are locked into a Clinton-Obama death match for the loyalty of the left, while McCain — who has secured the political right — can begin courting the center and run for the presidency itself (rather than for the nomination).

    The analysis continued, by pointing out what the strategists of Russia and Iran are now faced with a looming election of John McCain as President (since Romney withdrew), and that these strategists may decide that working with W now would be better than facing President McCain later. W’s election, in 2000, certainly threw off the plans of our Islamist enemies; however, McCain will be needed to finish them and any remaining government sponsors of terrorism off.

  • ROTF, in response to your comment @12:

    McCain gets a free pass only if we give it to him. His attendance record in the Senate has become a joke. He can’t even manage to show up and vote for something that he uses as part of his campaign pitch. He has a flip-flop record wide enough and long enough to use as a landing strip for a space shuttle. He has an anger-management problem that should negate his ever being allowed access to nuclear launch codes. His military experience consists of strategies and tactics that were obsolete during Vietnam, for crying out loud—and I’m nowhere near ready to allow someone who can manage to plow an expensive aircraft into something as big as the ass-end of an aircraft carrier the opportunity to “demonstrate his vision” in guiding an entire nation.

    McCain has no “thoughts of his own.” He memorizes and repeats talking points. He tells people what they want to hear, because he knows it’s the only way to get them to agree with him—and when that fails, he pulls out his bag of scary-thing talking points.

    He sells himself as standing up to Bu$h—when the fact is that he stood up WITH Bu$h, and hugged him.

    “The Master and the Apprentice”—that’s how you sell the Bu$h/McCain nightmare—and that’s how you beat that nightmare.

  • McCain doesn’t *have* a character anymore (if he ever had it); he *is* one. The press loves it and him, and will continue to do so. Which means that it’ll be just that much more difficult for us to fight him — because they’ll have his back. And we’re NOT (sorry for shouting) helping ourselves ANY (sorry for shouting) with the silly internecine battles over Obama/Clinton. She Is! Is Not! Is Too!

    Vote your heart in the primaries, vote your head in general (SCOTUS nominations are looming; whatever you may think of Clinton, H, do you really think McCain, the character, is going to nominate better ones than she will?). But quit, for goodness sake, interjecting irrelevancies (and nasty ones, too) into *every* subject. This used to be the best blog around, and a big part of its charm was the community of intelligent and literate commenters, who were willing and able to argue their points, without putting on blinkers and plowing on, blindly, down a single rut.

    I’ll be voting for Obama come Tuesday (thus cancelling Lance’s vote) but not because of the “yelling” which has been going on here recently, and which leaves a sour taste in my mouth. *Despite* it.

  • There is more than one kind of courage. The courage that McCain showed in Vietnam was exemplary. The courage that he showed in resuming his marriage after Vietnam? Not so exemplary.

    The courage that McCain showed in skipping the vote on the budget stimulus package? Not so exemplary.

    The political courage that McCain has showed over the years by sticking to his principles and not flip-flopping all over the place? Not so exemplary.

    The courage that McCain has shown in continuing to tell the far right wing of his party to go screw themselves, as opposed to kissing their rosy red behinds? Not so exemplary.

    He was courageous in a military context. Moral courage in other aspects of life? Not so much.

  • #32 continues…from Stratfor:

    In the weeks and months ahead, this distinction will allow strategists far beyond the United States to deal with a far simpler matrix of U.S. presidential possibilities, and they increasingly will be forced to consider the possible implications of a “President McCain.” The deepest impact would be felt in Russia and Iran. McCain has become rather famous in Russia for saying that all he saw when he looked into Putin’s eyes were three letters: K, G and B. And Iran is more than a touch nervous about McCain’s assertion that the United States needs to think of its Iraq deployment in a manner similar to that of Germany or South Korea — a decades-long commitment.

    The fear of an aggressive United States is not one that will fail to shape Russian and Iranian policies between now and the election. Tehran has been pussy footing around talks with the Bush administration, attempting to get as good of terms as possible on the future of Iraq. If Tehran thought 2009 would bring a more aggressive U.S. presidency, then the logic for reaching a settlement with the Bush administration would increase greatly. Suddenly, the United States could see some dramatic gains in its Middle East policy.

    The inverse is true for Russia. The Kremlin already is feeling pressure to secure its interests in the former Soviet Union before the United States can extricate itself from Iraq. McCain’s strength raises the possibility not only of a United States that is led by a man who sees the Kremlin leadership as requiring containment, but also of a United States that is no longer bogged down with Iraq and Iran and therefore is free to focus all of its attention on Moscow.

    (BOLD was added by me.)

    The reason why America is What-It-Is, is because of the I-N-D-I-V-I-D-U-A-L freedoms that are offered here. Example: If Joe Doe was…nevermind, Dems just want more Communism, i.e. they want the Government to take care of them.

    The only way the American government makes money, since it doesn’t work, is by taxation. One of the reasons that I enjoy watching this Hillary-Obama infighting in the Democratic Party, is because they have been the true racists and Mob-Rule-ists since…since early on.

    Mob Rule does not work…simple as that, and history proves my point. The democratic party sees America as a ‘TIT’, and won’t want to stop sucking on it until it is dry, all the “Rich” are dead, and until all individual freedoms are tossed away.

  • if it’s okay to bring up adultery from 1979 as a criticism of his character, isn’t it also okay to bring up being a war hero who survived five years of torture in Vietnam…

    Okay, time out! Will someone please explain to me how being a POW makes somebody a hero? And what’s with the 5 years of torture crap? Were they torturing him for 5 years? Look, I don’t doubt for a minute that his situation there was horrible, but does that mean that every POW in ‘Nam (or any other war) is a hero? If he’d organized an escape and in the process gunned down his captors (see “Rescue Dawn”), then I suppose you could talk about heroism. This is as hollow in McCain’s case as the repeated references to him that he “stood up to Bush on torture” that gets bandied about all the time to show what a maverick he is. The fact, for those with Alzheimer’s, is that he talked tough and then knuckled under to Bush on torture. And THAT, more than any of his lame actions or inactions in the past, is what placed him completely beyond the pale for me. If a guy who himself was tortured can’t stand for that principle, then I say screw him and the horse he came in on. He is dead to me.

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