As tributes continue to flow for the late Sen. John McCain,
the praise may seem a little excessive to some. But there’s a simple reason for
it. He was an old-school Republican who very easily could have been President,
in a time when candidates for that office were actually Presidential.
McCain, as we all know, would have been the first to tell us
that while he would have made a good President, he wasn’t sainthood material.
He made more than one serious mistake in judgment, including going along with
those who gave him bad political advice. As one who thought of myself as a
Republican, I had to draw the line in 2008, when Sarah Palin was on the ticket
with him. I likely would have voted for him, were it not for the prospect that
if something happened to him while in office, she would become President. In my
view, we dodged a bullet then, but in 2016, a similar bullet found us.
What do we admire about McCain? We know about his heroism as
a prisoner of war in in Vietnam, his fight for campaign-finance and immigration
reform, and most recently his vote against the repeal of Obamacare, much to the
chagrin of the President and most other Republican legislators. We also know about
those mistakes, that he had the honesty and authenticity to admit he had made.
He was clearly flawed and didn’t always live up to his own values.
But the difference between McCain and what we have now, is that he HAD values and
set goals that were beyond what were expedient for him. And he appreciated the
critical value of relationships in accomplishing what he thought, and what quite
a number of his colleagues in both parties agreed, was best for the country.
The elevation of John McCain seems over the top right now
because it’s not just about him. It’s a rebuke to our current President and to
his supporters in Congress. Being Republican used to stand for something
besides just being in power. I first was a little sad that McCain didn’t stay
alive long enough to witness the coming downfall of the current occupant of the
White House. That would have been nice karma. But Sen. McCain’s death is the
2-by-4 hitting the Republican Party over the head with the message: Wake up,
and clean up your act, or be added, to borrow a phrase from one of the
senator’s speeches, to the ash heap of
history.
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