For McCain, Flak Becomes FuelBy John F. Dickerson
October 18, 1999
Web posted at: 12:47 p.m. EDT (1647 GMT)
It was a full-scale personal attack. Behind the scenes last
week, congressional Republicans were zipping faxes to each other
labeling Senator John McCain a hypocrite: here he was, they said,
championing campaign-finance reform while taking money from those
with business before the Commerce Committee he chairs. And they
had the list to prove it! Software companies, cable companies,
phone companies, airlines! Rivals also whispered darkly that
McCain has an uncontrollable temper. Message: too loco to be
President. McCain defended himself against the hypocrisy
charge--"Who is corrupted by this system? All of us are
corrupted," he told his colleagues--and he admitted being a member
of Hotheads Anonymous. But these days, he insists, "I just keep
smiling. I don't want people to think they can get a reaction out
of me."
He has reason to smile. What doesn't play in Washington does in
New Hampshire. Polls show that McCain's support in that state has
jumped 10 points in the past month, leaving him with 21% of
likely Republican primary voters, compared with 40% for George W.
Bush. New Hampshire has a history of scarring front runners who
lope into the state with a lead. Now that Steve Forbes and
Elizabeth Dole have receded in state surveys, McCain is the only
challenger who appears to have traction. He has also won
endorsements from several state representatives and the beloved
former Senator Warren Rudman.
It's not just his anti-Washington bravado that accounts for
McCain's gain in a state of proudly ornery voters. The former
Navy pilot and prisoner of war has also tried to win the ground
game by visiting the state 28 times since he started running and
presiding at 80 town hall meetings. What's more, he has plans to
milk the success of his autobiography, which has remained on the
best seller list since its release a month ago. At the end of
October, sources tell TIME, McCain will launch television ads in
New Hampshire that recapitulate his war story. "Courage and
character" is the theme, says campaign manager Rick Davis.
In Austin, Texas, the Bush team is starting to notice. "He is the
one we worry most about," says a Granite State adviser to the
campaign. That used to be the position occupied by Forbes, but
the multimillionaire publisher has not managed in over a year to
close his nearly 20-point deficit with Bush in the key state of
Iowa. The Texas Governor's campaign staff is worried that any
damage Forbes may do through his planned negative ads will not
help Forbes, but will turn voters to McCain. Perhaps feeling the
pressure, Bush announced last week that he would participate in a
December debate in New Hampshire after previously saying he would
not debate at all until the new year.
The ascending McCain, whom New Hampshire-ites often compare with
Democratic challenger Bill Bradley, can't yet match his party's
front runner in the organization and money needed to go the
distance. In the coming weeks, say campaign aides, McCain will
announce organizations in Western states that they think will
show he has the longevity to take his run beyond its strongholds
of New Hampshire and South Carolina. Also like Bradley, McCain
will have to do it without his party's apparatus, which he spent
so much time infuriating last week. But that "only helps him up
here," says New Hampshire elder Rudman. "I wish that happened
every week."
--By John F. Dickerson. With reporting by James
Carney/Washington
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Cover Date: October 25, 1999
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