The Palm Beach Post

McCain torches Lake’s olive branch

Says candidate needs voters loyal to her father to win US Senate race

- Ronald J. Hansen Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK Meghan McCain

PHOENIX – U.S. Senate candidate Kari Lake tried to defuse a renewed battle over the late Sen. John McCain on Wednesday with a social media message to Meghan McCain suggesting they are both mothers who lost fathers to cancer. But the younger McCain made clear there will be “no peace.”

Lake suggested Monday in an interview with KTAR (92.3 FM) that her disparagin­g words about John McCain were said in jest.

Meghan McCain responded Tuesday with a social media post that said Lake’s comments reflected a sense that she can’t win her current Senate race without making peace with McCain loyalists. Meghan McCain then said, “No peace, (expletive).”

Ahead of that, Lake wrote a lengthy tweet on X, formerly known as Twitter, early Wednesday morning calling for them to meet and find common ground.

“As mothers, (both with two kiddos) I’m know we both agree that our children’s future is too important to let it slip away over past grudges or hurt feelings,” Lake wrote. “That’s why I’m working hard to unite Republican­s, Independen­ts, Democrats – ALL Americans.”

Her message didn’t include an apology for her repeated attacks on John McCain, who died of brain cancer in 2018, but said she wanted to make him and her father, Larry Lake, who also died of cancer, proud.

“I value you. I value your family and I value the passion you have for our state,” Lake said to Meghan McCain. “I’d love nothing more than to buy you a beer, a coffee or lunch and pick your brain about how we can work together to strengthen our state.”

Hours later, Meghan McCain responded in all capital letters, “No peace, (expletive)!”

For Lake, the episode prolongs and makes public a common criticism she has received in her apparently failed efforts to win over support from former foes.

Republican­s familiar with Lake’s outreach to people like Karrin Taylor Robson, the McCains and former Gov. Doug Ducey have said those efforts didn’t include apologies.

In a 10-minute interview on KTAR on Wednesday, Meghan McCain said she viewed Lake’s outreach Wednesday as borne of Lake’s poor standing with voters and, in Trumpian fashion, indifferen­t to the personal pain inflicted on her family.

“This is very deeply personal,” she said. “I am 39 years old, and I just don’t want to live in this world where Trump and his minions like Kari Lake think that it is funny or not deeply hurtful and impactful to many people when you continue to desecrate my dad in death. … It never stops being painful.”

Meghan McCain said Lake did not comment about her father in jest, as Lake asserted Monday.

“It’s not a joke. I used to work on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ I know what a joke is,” she said.

As for Lake’s offer of a beer or coffee,

“This is very deeply personal. I am 39 years old, and I just don’t want to live in this world where Trump and his minions like Kari Lake think that it is funny or not deeply hurtful and impactful to many people when you continue to desecrate my dad in death. … It never stops being painful.”

Meghan McCain ruled that out.

“We’re not friends and we have nothing in common,” she said.

Lake rhetorical­ly set fire to the GOP establishm­ent during her 2022 run. Now she is the Republican front-runner in the race for the seat held by Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., but her sharp comments from the past are trailing her again, none more than her many attacks on John McCain, who won six terms in the Senate and carried the state in his 2008 presidenti­al run.

Among her attacks on John McCain, Lake asked a crowd, “We don’t have any McCain Republican­s in here, do we? Get the hell out!”

She said the GOP “was the party of McCain. It was bad. Arizona has delivered some losers, haven’t they?”

In another broadside after winning the GOP nomination in 2022, Lake said, “We drove a stake through the heart of the McCain machine.”

Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., the only prominent Democrat running for the Senate seat, pounced on Lake’s inadverten­t detour into intraparty insults.

On Wednesday, he tweeted a video with Lake’s many statements disparagin­g McCain. It overlooks his own critical comments about McCain, and hints at his own need to expand his appeal beyond left-leaning voters.

By contrast, Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb, who is challengin­g Lake for the GOP nomination, has remained publicly silent on the matter of Lake’s feud with Meghan McCain. It is in keeping with a relatively low-profile campaign approach that continues to hammer on his interest in tightening America’s border with Mexico.

For her part, Sinema, who has not publicly said whether she will seek a second term, ignored the unfolding spectacle, as she has usually done throughout the past year.

Lake sought to change the subject on social media, posting a segment of her appearing on the conservati­ve network Newsmax in which she declared she is “unapologet­ically America first” in a reminder that she is, as always, standing by former President Donald Trump, who feuded with John McCain for years and continued to criticize the senator after his death.

But for a third straight day, Lake remained on the hot seat over her past remarks.

Lake said all Republican­s “need to get a little bit thicker skin because we’re going through some tough stuff right now and we need to be able to take a joke.”

Meghan McCain responded on X that Lake is trying to backtrack.

“Kari Lake is trying to walk back her continued attacks on my Dad (and family) and all of his loyal supporters after telling them to ‘get the hell out,’ ” McCain wrote Tuesday in a social media post. “Guess she realized she can’t become a Senator without us.”

“We see you for who you are – and are repulsed by it.”

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 ?? LOU ROCCO/ABC ?? In their ongoing battle over the late Sen. John McCain, U.S. Senate candidate Kari Lake reached out to Meghan McCain suggesting that they find common ground. McCain responded that peace is not an option.
LOU ROCCO/ABC In their ongoing battle over the late Sen. John McCain, U.S. Senate candidate Kari Lake reached out to Meghan McCain suggesting that they find common ground. McCain responded that peace is not an option.
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