The Columbus Dispatch

Cancer diagnosis to silence McCain? Hardly

- By Donna Cassata

WASHINGTON — Battling brain cancer, John McCain on Thursday vowed to return to the Senate, leveling fresh criticism at the Trump administra­tion and aiming a good-natured dig at Republican and Democratic colleagues shaken by news of his diagnosis.

“I greatly appreciate the outpouring of support — unfortunat­ely for my sparring partners in Congress, I’ll be back soon, so stand-by!” McCain said in a tweet. Showing no signs of stepping back from political and national security battles, he issued a statement slamming the Trump administra­tion over its Syria policy.

The 80-year-old McCain, the GOP’s presidenti­al nominee in 2008 and a sixterm Arizona lawmaker, was diagnosed with glioblasto­ma, an aggressive type of brain cancer, according to doctors at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, who had removed a blood clot above his left eye last Friday. They also managed to remove all of the tumor that was visible on brain scans.

The senator and his family are considerin­g further treatment, including chemothera­py and radiation, as he recuperate­s at his home in Arizona. President Donald Trump called the senator on Thursday, said a White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

But in a blistering statement through his office, McCain criticized the administra­tion over reports that it was ending a program to assist Syrian opposition forces fighting the government of Bashar Assad.

“If these reports are true, the administra­tion is playing right into the hands of Vladimir Putin,” said McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. “Making any concession to Russia, absent a broader strategy for Syria, is irresponsi­ble and short-sighted.”

McCain’s closest friend in the Senate, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, said that they had spoken by telephone Wednesday night and that the diagnosis had been a shock to McCain. But Graham said “woe is me” is not in McCain’s DNA. “One thing John has never been afraid of is death,” said Graham, who said he expects McCain to be back at the Capitol.

Before a Thursday news conference on immigratio­n legislatio­n, Graham said McCain called him three times. “He is yelling at me to buck up, I’m so going to buck up,” Graham said.

It was unclear how long McCain might be out. Meantime, prayers and words of encouragem­ent flowed in Thursday from presidents and Senate colleagues past and present.

“I called Sen. John McCain this morning to wish him well and encourage him in his fight. Instead, he encouraged me,” said former President George W. Bush, who prevailed over McCain for the GOP presidenti­al nomination in 2000. “I was impressed by his spirit and determinat­ion.”

Former Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas said: “Having known John for many decades, I am certain that he is as tough as they come — if anyone can defeat this, it’s him. John is a true American hero.”

According to the American Brain Tumor Associatio­n, more than 12,000 people a year are diagnosed with glioblasto­ma, the same type of tumor that struck McCain’s Democratic colleague in legislativ­e battles, the late Ted Kennedy of Massachuse­tts. The American Cancer Society puts the five-year survival rate for patients over 55 at about 4 percent.

McCain, a former combat pilot, has a lifetime of near-death experience­s — surviving a July 1967 fire and explosion on the USS Forrestal that killed 134 sailors, flying into power lines in Spain, being shot down in October 1967 and falling into Truc Bach Lake in Hanoi, and going through 5 years in a North Vietnamese prison.

“The Hanoi Hilton couldn’t break John McCain’s spirit many years ago, so Barbara and I know — with confidence — he and his family will meet this latest battle in his singular life of service with courage and determinat­ion,” said former President George H.W. Bush.

Resilience, longtime colleagues say, has fueled his long Senate career and helped him overcome two failed presidenti­al campaigns. For some, McCain has become the moral voice of the Republican Party, whose leaders have not always said out loud what they really think about President Trump.

“Clearly, in the Republican Party he has been completely unafraid to tell his own party when he thinks they’re wrong,” said McCain friend Steve Duprey.

Yet for all of his confrontat­ional style, McCain has voted with Trump most of the time.

 ?? [J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham, John McCain’s best friend in the Senate, said the Arizona politician was shocked by the diagnosis of brain cancer but remains as feisty as ever. “One thing John has never been afraid of is death,” Graham said,...
[J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham, John McCain’s best friend in the Senate, said the Arizona politician was shocked by the diagnosis of brain cancer but remains as feisty as ever. “One thing John has never been afraid of is death,” Graham said,...

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