The Denver Post

Despite cancer, Mccain’s maverick ways press on

- By Melissa Daniels

PHOENIX» U.S. Sen. John Mccain’s legacy was thrust into focus nearly one year ago when he announced his brain cancer diagnosis. The six-term senator and decorated Vietnam War veteran is now fighting the illness from his beloved Arizona, and filling the role of one of the few congressio­nal Republican voices to publicly rebuke Trump administra­tion decisions.

Yet the question of what happens if Mccain steps down from office before 2022 is a lingering one, casting an uncomforta­ble haze around the future of a seat that can’t quite ever be filled.

“John Mccain is a one-ofa-kind politician, and there’s no replacing him,” said Stan Barnes, an Arizona Republican consultant. “No one serving in political office today remembers a time when John Mccain was not representi­ng us in Washington.”

Some Arizona Republican­s have criticized conversati­ons about the future of Mccain’s seat as inappropri­ate. But reflection­s around the 81-year-old statesman’s life, legacy and status as a national political figure have resurfaced via a new HBO documentar­y, “John Mccain: For Whom the Bell Tolls,” and his new memoir, “The Restless Wave.”

The Mccains have a family retreat south of Sedona, Ariz., along tree-lined Oak Creek. Daughter Meghan Mccain was married there.

She said on KTAR’S Mac and Gaydos radio show Tuesday that she’s been trying to visit her father every other weekend. She said he’s strong, walking, talking and hanging in there.

“Everybody’s just dealing with it the best they can,” Meghan Mccain said.

Following a decorated military career that included spending more than five years in prison camps, Mccain entered the political arena in the early 1980s. He went from the House of Representa­tives to being elected to the Senate in 1986, following Barry Goldwater, who retired. Mccain gained a reputation as a lawmaker who was willing to stick to his conviction­s rather than go along with party leaders. It is a streak that draws a mix of respect and ire.

Matt Salmon, a former Arizona congressma­n, said Mccain was instrument­al in his own political career — along with countless other Arizona Republican­s. Much like Goldwater, Mccain has been “the godfather of Arizona politics” for decades.

Salmon said Mccain exemplifie­s how to stand up for one’s conviction­s and constituen­ts regardless of the wants of party leadership. During the late 1990s, Salmon drove a successful effort to remove Newt Gingrich as speaker.

“I don’t know that I would’ve had the courage to go do something like that without a maverick like John Mccain paving the way,” he said.

When Salmon was elected to Congress, Mccain, as a mentor, was supportive, loyal and quick to share his dry sense of humor.

“He said to me, ‘Congratula­tions, Matt, now you’re part of the problem,’“Salmon said.

Mccain’s maverick ways have pressed on in the era of President Donald Trump. He continues to release statements and tweets from Arizona. After Trump’s decision to not endorse a G7 statement with other global trade leaders, Mccain tweeted a message to U.S. allies that said in part “Americans stand with you, even if our president doesn’t.”

Sen. Jeff Flake, Arizona’s junior senator who is not running for re-election, said Mccain’s mantra of “country before party” sets him apart from other senators. Flake praised his honesty and transparen­cy, as witnessed in the recent documentar­y.

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