I’ve been following John McCain for quite some time, but my single favorite McCain story of all time came in March 2007, when the senator was chatting with some reporters aboard his campaign bus. The subject turned to sexual health and contraception — and McCain hadn’t the foggiest idea what to say.
Asked whether federal grants to education should focus on abstinence-only, McCain wasn’t sure. Asked whether he believes “contraceptives help stop the spread of HIV,” McCain said he had no idea. Asked if contraceptives “stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases,” McCain was dumbfounded, looked at the ceiling, and urgently motioned for his staff to rescue him.
These weren’t trick questions, but McCain ended up looking like a fool. After a quarter-century in Congress, during which time McCain has participated in thousands of policy hearings, and has voted on hundreds of bills relating to public health, but as a presidential candidate, he hasn’t the foggiest idea if contraceptives can “stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.”
The subject continues to confound the poor man.
This 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.” Yesterday, reporters asked McCain if he agrees with his top advisor:
There’s a very good reason McCain doesn’t want to talk about this.
As the NYT reported, McCain “voted against a 2005 bill requiring health insurance companies to cover birth-control pills as well as Viagra.”
So, we get confused and bumbling answers like the one in the video. If you can’t watch the clip, the WSJ described the scene nicely:
When McCain was asked for his position on the issue, he said — with a nervous laugh — “I certainly do not want to discuss that issue.”
The reporter pressed. “But apparently you’ve voted against–”
“I don’t know what I voted,” McCain said.
The reporter explained that McCain voted against a bill in 2003 that would have required health insurance companies to cover prescription birth control. “Is that still your position?” she persisted.
During the awkward exchange, with several lengthy pauses, McCain said he had no immediate knowledge of the vote. “I’ve cast thousands of votes in the Senate,” McCain said, then continued: “I will respond to — it’s a, it’s a…”
“Delicate issue,” the reporter offered, to a relieved laugh from McCain.
“I don’t usually duck an issue, but I’m — I’ll try to get back to you,” he explained.
After a pause, another reporter posed a question closer to McCain’s comfort zone: “Can I ask you about Russia?”
If it sounds to you like some of the reporters were trying to help McCain get out of this, we’re on the same page.
Nevertheless, let’s not lose the forest for the trees here. Sure, it’s embarrassing that McCain can’t answer a fairly easy question on an issue of concern to millions of women. And sure, it’s amusing that McCain and one of his top advisors don’t agree on the issue.
But the key thing to remember here is that McCain’s record on reproductive rights and sexual health is utterly miserable.