The Free Press Journal

Senator John McCain dies at 81

One of his final wishes was that he did not want Trump to attend his funeral

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Influentia­l US Senator John McCain, a Vietnam war hero and a towering figure in the American political scene, who turned out to be a prominent critic of President Donald Trump has died following a battle with an aggressive form of brain cancer. He was 81.

One of John McCain's final wishes, as he struggled against a devastatin­g brain cancer, could not have been more clear: He made it known that he did not want Donald Trump to attend his funeral. The two men never pretended to like each other. It was not just their clashing personalit­ies or vastly dissimilar background­s. Their difference­s were fundamenta­l, their values dramatical­ly at odds, and their disagreeme­nts public and pointed.

When Trump announced his candidacy for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in June 2015, suggesting that many Mexican immigrants were criminals and "rapists," McCain denounced him for using language that "fired up the crazies."

Trump's response: McCain was a "dummy" who had barely managed to graduate from the US Naval Academy. Never one to give in, Trump then attacked the former navy pilot over what might have seemed his least vulnerable point: the military career -including more than five years as a wounded and tortured prisoner of war in Vietnam -- for which he received a slew of decoration­s including the Silver Star, the Legion of Merit and three Bronze Stars. Trump, who received serial deferments and did not serve in the military, said that McCain was "a war hero (only) because he was captured," adding, "I like people that weren't captured." That comment that drew widespread condemnati­on, including from several veterans groups.

McCain's response starkly illustrate­d the two men's different characters: The senator sought no apology on his own behalf but said that Trump did owe an apology "to the families of those who have sacrificed in conflict" and of those taken prisoner while "serving their country." The rise of Trump's populist candidacy in 2016 was widely seen as a disavowal of McCain-style Republican­ism and of the more establishm­ent approach he took during his own presidenti­al run in 2008. Eight years later, here was a man who openly professed his love of money, who had avoided military service because of a foot problem he later said had healed itself, a man who bragged about greasing the wheels for his New York real estate empire by donating to both Democrats and Republican­s, a man who, in short, unapologet­ically flouted the long-establishe­d traditions of American politics and the presidency. As McCain pursued his own re-election to the Senate in 2016, he broke with his party's nominee after a video aired in which Trump could be heard bragging that when he saw beautiful women he would sometimes "grab 'em by the pussy."

 ??  ?? Fouaad Mirza bagged a silver medal for India in the Equestrian Eventing Individual category at the Asian Games. He became the first Indian to win an individual medal in the equestrian event since 1982 and is the first Indian to win in Europe.
Fouaad Mirza bagged a silver medal for India in the Equestrian Eventing Individual category at the Asian Games. He became the first Indian to win an individual medal in the equestrian event since 1982 and is the first Indian to win in Europe.

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