Los Angeles Times

Arizona says goodbye to Sen. McCain

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PHOENIX — Cindy McCain pressed her face against the flag-draped casket of her husband, Sen. John McCain, on Wednesday and several of his children sobbed during the first of two services for the statesman and former prisoner of war before he is taken for the last time from the state he represente­d since the 1980s.

The private service at the Arizona Capitol marked the first appearance of McCain’s family members since the senator died Saturday of brain cancer.

During the service, Gov. Doug Ducey remembered McCain as a senator and internatio­nally known statesman as well as a major figure in the history of Arizona.

Barry Goldwater was an Arizona native, but McCain was “Arizona’s favorite adopted son,” the governor said on what would have been the 82nd birthday of the senator, who was born in the Panama Canal Zone while his father served in the military.

“Imagining an Arizona without John McCain is like picturing Arizona without the Grand Canyon,” Ducey said.

Former Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl said he had been with McCain all around the world and the former Navy pilot had better instincts on when to assert U.S. power than anyone else he knew.

Kyl said he would miss McCain, whose greatest contributi­on was national security, he said.

Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona offered the benedictio­n at the service.

Arizona National Guard members carried the casket into the Arizona Capitol Museum rotunda, where McCain lay in state. Black curtains hung in the rotunda. U.S. and Arizona flags encircled the room.

By the time the service ended and the rotunda was cleared, at least 100 people had already gathered outside for a public viewing.

They took shelter from the hot sun under tents erected by security teams while volunteers filled coolers with ice and water bottles.

Chasity Pullin, whose husband and father are both veterans, was among those in line. She said she liked how McCain didn’t act like he was above others, and praised all he did for veterans.

“It feels like you’re losing part of your family, as much as he did,” she said

Even Democrats waited in the heat to say goodbye to McCain.

Kassandra Morales, 44, stood with her sons, 8 and 2 years old. The single mom, a Democrat, brought a bouquet of flowers and said she had always looked up to McCain.

“Yesterday I asked my son who his hero was. He gave me a rapper’s name,” Morales said. “I brought my children here to show them what a real hero was.”

Veteran Judith Hatch handed out f lags to those assembled, saying Arizona had lost a champion for the military.

“We definitely have lost a strong advocate, so we’ll need someone who is going to step up to the plate” to succeed him, Hatch said.

The public viewing was to go on as long as people were still waiting in line, said Rick Davis, McCain’s former presidenti­al campaign manager.

McCain has been a political fixture for some Arizona residents for their entire lives.

He took office in the early 1980s, first as a congressma­n and then as a senator in the seat once held by Goldwater.

Thursday morning will feature a procession through Phoenix on the way to a memorial service at North Phoenix Baptist Church, with the public invited to line the route along Interstate 17.

The memorial service will include tributes, readings and musical performanc­es, including a tribute from former Vice President Joe Biden. Musical choices are to include a recessiona­l to “My Way” by Frank Sinatra.

From there, McCain’s casket will depart Arizona.

Another viewing will be at the U.S. Capitol on Friday, with a final memorial service at the Washington National Cathedral.

 ?? Ross D. Franklin Pool Photo ?? CINDY McCAIN, wife of Sen. John McCain, touches his casket during a memorial service at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix. A public viewing followed the service.
Ross D. Franklin Pool Photo CINDY McCAIN, wife of Sen. John McCain, touches his casket during a memorial service at the Arizona Capitol in Phoenix. A public viewing followed the service.

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