Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
07.16.2008 10:49 am

Did McCain endorse Obama today?

WASHINGTON _ Not exactly. But his tone in speaking in front of an NAACP gathering this morning was decidedly different that the stiletto approach of his campaign and the Republican National Committee toward Barack Obama of late.

Here’s what John McCain is saying about now, according to remarks prepared for delivery.

“Let me begin with a few words about my opponent. Don’t tell him I said this, but he is an impressive fellow in many ways. He has inspired a great many Americans, some of whom had wrongly believed that a political campaign could hold no purpose or meaning for them. His success should make Americans, all Americans, proud. Of course, I would prefer his success not continue quite as long as he hopes. But it makes me proud to know the country I’ve loved and served all my life is still a work in progress, and always improving. Senator Obama talks about making history, and he’s made quite a bit of it already …

“A few years before the NAACP was founded, President Theodore Roosevelt’s invitation of Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House was taken as an outrage and an insult in many quarters. America today is a world away from the cruel and prideful bigotry of that time. There is no better evidence of this than the nomination of an African-American to be the presidential nominee of his party. Whatever the outcome in November, Senator Obama has achieved a great thing — for himself and for his country — and I thank him for it.”

(btw: Join me for a STLtoday discussion today, like every Wednesday,  between 11 and noon on the topic of presidential politics.)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 3.67 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...
2 comments

Comments are closed.

Unlike Obama (and Tim Hogan), Senator McCain is mature and decent enough to respect people with whom he disagrees, and to give them the honor due for their accomplishments. That is one of the differences between a statesman and a politician - and between Senator McCain and Barak Obama.

— Nick Kasoff
5:33 pm July 17th, 2008

Just saying something does not make it so. I have never heard Barak Obama show any disrespect to John McCain, or his accomplishments. As for being a politician, Mr. McCain has change too many positions to count while trying to court the extreme right of his party. I do think that Mr. Obama has questioned John McCain’s ideas, and since most of them are the same ideas we have seen for the past 7 years from republicans, it is right of him to do so. We can not afford to keep going down the same path, and John McCain is only offering more of the same.

By the way, John McCain speaking at the NCAAP is simply a tactical “political” maneuver. It’s hard to see what he thinks he is goining by doing so, but that is what it is.

— David
12:32 pm July 18th, 2008