Dayton Daily News

A WARRIOR’S FAREWELL

Former Presidents Bush, Obama eulogize John McCain as nation's capital pauses for funeral of late Arizona senator.

- Peter Baker

He drove WASHINGTON — them crazy. He berated them on the way to the White House and badgered them once they got there. He stood by them when he thought they were right and tore at their heels when he was convinced they were wrong. And when it came time to depart this world, John McCain wanted them to tell his story.

Former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, the two men who thwarted McCain’s ambitions to become commander in chief, stood one after the other before the nation’s elite at Washington National Cathedral on Saturday to honor the man they beat, extolling him as a oneof-a-kind figure the likes of which will not be seen again anytime soon.

That they were asked, and not the current president, spoke volumes about the man and the moment. And while neither explicitly mentioned President Donald Trump, who, uninvited and unwelcome, went golfing instead, their tributes could hardly be heard without the unspoken contrast to the current occupant of the Oval Office, a message amplified by a more overt rebuke from the senator’s daughter.

“So much of our politics, our public life, our public discourse, can seem small and mean and petty, traffickin­g in bombast and insult, in phony controvers­ies and manufactur­ed outrage,” Obama said. “It’s a politics that pretends to be brave, but in fact is born of fear. John called us to be bigger than that. He called us to be better than that.”

Bush praised McCain for his “courage and decency,” an exemplar of the storied American values of standing up to bullying and oppression. “If we are ever tempted to forget who we are, to grow weary of our cause, John’s voice will always come as a whisper over our shoulder — we are better than this, America is better than this,” Bush said.

Meghan McCain declared: “The America of John McCain has no need to be made great again because America was always great.” The audience then burst out in applause, something that rarely happens during the traditiona­lly solemn funerals held at the cathedral.

While Trump was absent, political figures from both parties made their way to the house of worship on a dreary, overcast and humid morning. They came to bid farewell to John Sidney McCain III, son and grandson of admirals, naval aviator, tortured prisoner, congressma­n, six-term senator, two-time presidenti­al candidate, patriot, maverick, reformer, warrior, curmudgeon, father, husband and finally, in death, American icon.

They also came to mourn an ideal that he represente­d and a town that he once dominated with verve and humor and memorable flashes of temper. Like McCain, many of the Republican­s who attended have found themselves deeply discourage­d by their own party’s president. But unlike McCain, most of them do not say so out loud, for fear of rage by Twitter or retributio­n by the base. It was almost as if it were a meeting of Washington’s political undergroun­d, if the undergroun­d met in a grand cathedral with 10,650 organ pipes.

Standing in for Trump at the cathedral were his daughter Ivanka Trump and son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, as well as his chief of staff, John F. Kelly, and national security adviser, John Bolton, seated not far away from former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Rudy Giuliani, the president’s lawyer and a longtime political ally of McCain’s, also attended.

McCain, who died last weekend at 81, directed his own farewell with the same contrarian spirit that flavored his political career, and it came off just as he would have wanted. The 2 1/2 hour ceremony blended the majesty of the officially designated national house of prayer, the discipline of his cherished Naval Academy and the unabashed, unapologet­ic patriotism of a Fourth of July fireworks display.

As he battled brain cancer, McCain told his advisers months ago that he wanted Bush and Obama to speak at his funeral, then called each of them to make the request. The point was to emphasize the common values that they shared despite their difference­s.

Obama recalled that during their 2008 contest, McCain corrected a supporter who denounced Obama as an Arab. “I was grateful, but I wasn’t surprised,” Obama said. “I never saw John treat anyone differentl­y because of their race, or religion, or gender.

“It’s no secret, it’s been mentioned, that he had a temper,” Obama said, “and when it flared up, it was a force of nature, a wonder to behold — his jaw grinding, his face reddening, his eyes boring a hole right through you. Not that I ever experience­d this firsthand, mind you.”

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 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Cindy McCain watches a joint military service casket team carry the remains of her husband, Sen. John McCain, after his funeral service at the Washington National Cathedral on Saturday.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES Cindy McCain watches a joint military service casket team carry the remains of her husband, Sen. John McCain, after his funeral service at the Washington National Cathedral on Saturday.

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