The Peterborough Examiner

John McCain made war and peace

Former presidenti­al candidate, 81, dies after cancer battle

- NANCY BENAC

WASHINGTON — Sen. John McCain, who faced down his captors in a Vietnam prisoner of war camp with jut-jawed defiance and later turned his rebellious streak into a 35-year political career that took him to Congress and the Republican presidenti­al nomination, died Saturday after battling brain cancer for more than a year. He was 81.

McCain was elected to the Senate from Arizona six times, but twice thwarted in seeking the presidency. McCain returned to the Senate in 2009, determined not to let that defeat define him.

In his valedictor­y memoir, “The Restless Wave,” McCain wrote of the world he inhabited: “I hate to leave it. But I don’t have a complaint. Not one.”

He continued: “I’ve known great passions, seen amazing wonders, fought in a war and helped make a peace ... I made a small place for myself in the story of America and the history of my times.”

But former vice-president Joe Biden put it this way: “I think John’s legacy is that he never quits.”

Ultimately, McCain did not fear much, including the wrath of President Donald Trump and his Republican colleagues. Notably just last year, McCain was the decisive “no” on legislatio­n to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

That made him the unlikely saviour of the signature legislativ­e achievemen­t of Barack Obama, the man who beat him for president in 2008. He also ran in 2000, losing the GOP nomination to George W. Bush.

Also notable were the times McCain held his tongue in service of a party or political gain.

For a time, he stuck by the party’s 2016 presidenti­al nominee, Trump, even when Trump questioned his status as a war hero by saying: “I like people who weren’t captured.” McCain declared the comment offensive to veterans.

His breaking point with Trump was the release a month before the election of a lewd audio in which Trump said he could kiss and grab women. McCain said he’d rather write in the name of a conservati­ve Republican “who’s qualified to be president.” When Trump blamed him for the survival of the Affordable Care Act, McCain sniffed, “I’ve faced tougher adversarie­s.”

John Sidney McCain III was born in 1936 in the Panama Canal Zone, where his father was stationed in the military. He attended the U.S. Naval Academy and in October 1967, McCain was on his 23rd bombing run over North Vietnam when he was shot out of the sky and taken prisoner. He refused an early release offered by his captors as a propaganda ploy. Later, his will broken by beatings, McCain signed a confession. That was his darkest hour in captivity. But his recovery from that episode taught him to trust himself, he later wrote.

McCain’s fellow POWs appointed him camp entertainm­ent officer, chaplain and communicat­ions chief. To them, he imparted comic relief, literary tutorials, news of the day — and even religious sustenance.

McCain returned home from his years as a POW on crutches and never regained full mobility in his arms and leg. In 1981, he married Cindy Hensley, the daughter of a wealthy beer distributo­r in Arizona. By 1982, he’d been elected to the House and four years later to an open Senate seat. He and Cindy had four children, to add to three from his first marriage. Their youngest was adopted from Bangladesh.

McCain cultivated a conservati­ve voting record and a reputation as a tightwad with taxpayer dollars.

In the 1990s, McCain shouldered the long effort to account for American soldiers still missing from the war and to normalize relations with Vietnam. During his final years in the Senate, McCain was perhaps the loudest advocate for U.S. military involvemen­t in Iraq, Syria, Libya and more. That often made him a critic of first Obama and then Trump.

In October 2017, McCain blistered Trump’s “America first” foreign policy approach as a “half-baked, spurious nationalis­m cooked up by people who would rather find scapegoats than solve problems.”

 ?? J. DAVID AKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flags flying at half-mast in honour of Sen. John McCain frame the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Sunday.
J. DAVID AKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flags flying at half-mast in honour of Sen. John McCain frame the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Sunday.
 ?? MATT ROURKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Arizona Sen. John McCain died on Saturday at 81.
MATT ROURKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Arizona Sen. John McCain died on Saturday at 81.

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