The Day

McCain played favorites, right to his grave

-

Sen. John McCain's subtle castigatio­n and ostentatio­us exclusion of President Trump from his prolonged choreograp­hed funeral events sparked some cognitive dissonance. Particular­ly since, front and center, sat George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.

During the 2000 presidenti­al campaign Bush approved circulatio­n of vicious falsehood that McCain, who'd just clobbered him in New Hampshire, had illegitima­tely fathered a black child. (Political scientists deemed that the ugliest presidenti­al campaign smear since 1884.) As a result, Bush won South Carolina to secure their party's nomination and (thanks to a Republican Supreme Court) the White House.

Then in 2008 Clinton, who had long confessed to employing various means to dodge the military draft and Vietnam, shamelessl­y implored America to shun McCain's presidenti­al candidacy vs. Mrs. Clinton because the five-year prisoner-of-war might be a brainwashe­d Russian marionette, a literal “Manchurian Candidate.”

Nevermind that none of Trump's innumerabl­e peccadillo­es approach Clinton's serial sexual abuse of females, not only while in office but in the Oval Office itself.

The difference? Clinton is still a media darling and Bush is as popular today as Trump is unpopular (62 percent). Senator McCain thus proved himself the ultimate political opportunis­t literally right to the grave. Martin Crane New London

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States