The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SEN. JOHN MCCAIN, 81, DIES

Vietnam War hero became leading voice on national security.

- By Sean Sullivan

PHOENIX — John Sidney McCain III, the maverick Republican who twice sought the presidency and served in the Senate for more than three decades after surviving brutal captivity during the Vietnam War, died Saturday after battling brain cancer. He was 81.

“Senator John Sidney McCain III died at 4:28 p.m. on August 25, 2018. With the Senator when he passed were his wife Cindy and their family. At his death, he had served the United States of America faithfully for sixty years,” the family said in a statement.

A public figure for nearly 40 years, Sen. McCain left an indelible mark on the nation during a long and sometimes polarizing political career marked by an aggressive military posture as the United States fought wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

McCain first arrived on the national stage as a POW after his plane was shot down over Hanoi in 1967. A few months earlier, McCain, then a Navy pilot, had survived a deadly fire on the USS Forrestal, an aircraft carrier.

In 1982, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representa­tives. Four years later, he won his seat in the Senate. In the upper chamber of Congress, McCain establishe­d himself as a leading voice on national security and foreign policy, particular­ly from his chairmansh­ip of the powerful Armed Services Committee.

He also cultivated a reputation as an independen­t willing to work with Democrats on immigratio­n and campaign finance. McCain was a fierce critic of Russia and a strong proponent of an aggressive U.S. role against the Islamic State extremist group.

While he had the respect of many GOP leaders, Trump criticized him personally in 2015, shocking political observers. Then a candidate for president, Trump said McCain was not a war hero because he was captured by the North Vietnamese. “I like people that weren’t captured,” Trump said at the time.

The two men also were at odds over policy. Last fall, McCain offered a sharp, if veiled critique of Trump, saying in a speech that “some half-baked, spurious nationalis­m” should be considered “as unpatrioti­c as an attachment to any other tired dogma of the past that Americans consigned to the ash heap of history.”

Earlier this year, McCain came out against Trump’s nominee for director of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency. McCain said Gina Haspel had not adequately explained her involvemen­t, during the George W. Bush administra­tion, in a controvers­ial “enhanced” interrogat­ion program that he and other critics said amounted to torture. Haspel was confirmed by the Senate neverthele­ss.

McCain spoke from experience. He was held for more than five years in a Hanoi prison, where he was tortured and often deprived of sleep and food.

The son and grandson of Navy admirals, he was offered early release by his captors but refused to go home before the other POWs.

In the summer of 2017, Sen. McCain was diagnosed with a tumor called a glioblasto­ma, which is an aggressive type of brain cancer.

He returned to the Senate after his diagnosis and cast a pivotal vote against a Republican bill to undo the Affordable Care Act. During a post-midnight roll call on the Senate floor, he turned his thumb down and effectivel­y thwarted one of the GOP’s signature promises of recent years.

After leaving Washington in December, he never returned to the Senate. As he underwent treatment in Arizona, he kept a low profile, issuing written statements on major news developmen­ts but offering the public few glimpses of his condition.

McCain collaborat­ed with a longtime adviser, Mark Salter, on a memoir, “The Restless Wave,” that was released in May.

Among other things, the book captured McCain’s difficult relationsh­ip with Trump. The president, he wrote, “has declined to distinguis­h the actions of our government from the crimes of despotic ones.”

He also remarked that,” The appearance of toughness, or a reality show facsimile of toughness, seems to matter more than any of our values.”

McCain ran for president in 2000, losing the Republican nomination to the eventual 43rd president, George W. Bush. Eight years later, he ran again, this time winning his party’s nomination but losing the general election to Barack Obama.

McCain struggled against strong head winds in a banner year for Democrats. Obama and his party scored major victories as voters vented their anger and anxiety over the Iraq War and a struggling economy.

The Arizona senator selected then-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin for the party’s vice-presidenti­al nominee, a controvers­ial choice that would become one of the defining decisions of his career.

The senator is survived by his mother, Roberta; his wife, Cindy; two sons and a daughter from a first marriage, Douglas, Andrew and Sidney; four children from his second marriage, Meghan McCain, Jimmy McCain Jack McCain and Bridget McCain; a brother, Joseph P. McCain of Washington; a sister, Jean Alexandra McCain Morgan of Annapolis; and five grandchild­ren.

McCain’s death opens up a Senate seat that party leaders expect to remain in Republican hands for two more years, as the GOP clings to a narrow majority in the upper chamber of Congress.

Under state law, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey will appoint a successor. Among the list of potential appointees are McCain’s wife, Cindy; Ducey’s chief of staff, Kirk Adams; state Treasurer Eileen Klein; and former congressma­n John Shadegg.

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 ?? HARRY E. WALKER / TNS ?? U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) left an indelible mark on the nation and establishe­d himself as leading voice on homeland security and foreign policy in his nearly 40 years as a public figure.
HARRY E. WALKER / TNS U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) left an indelible mark on the nation and establishe­d himself as leading voice on homeland security and foreign policy in his nearly 40 years as a public figure.

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