Contact
Advertise
About Us
 
Home
News
Features
Music
Film
Art
Literary
Food
Stage
Outside
All Stories
Curiosities
Gallery
Calendar
  Home arrow News arrow News from Space arrow the straight talker

 
the straight talker | Print |  E-mail
Written by by Matt Kanner   
Wednesday, 21 March 2007

He is billed as a candidate renowned for his straight talk, but Sen. John McCain offered supporters in the Exeter Town Hall some standup comedy on Sunday, March 18.

“After I lost the primary in North Carolina, I slept like a baby,” McCain said. “Sleep two hours, wake up and cry. Sleep two hours, wake up and cry.”

It was the Arizona Republican’s first trip to Exeter since his presidential bid in 2000, when he lost the primary to President George Bush. But McCain is running again in 2008, and he assured supporters he intends to spend a great deal of time in the Granite State. The senator’s recent tour of New Hampshire included scheduled stops in Bedford, Milford, Newport, Bow, Dover, Windham, Nashua and Exeter.

Area residents packed Town Hall on Sunday, filling the seats, balcony and aisles. McCain arrived by bus around 3 p.m. and entered the hall to an excited burst of applause. He loosened up the audience with several jokes and anecdotes before diving into the meat of his speech, addressing issues such as the war in Iraq, federal overspending and climate change.

The senator also vowed to make sure New Hampshire remains at the forefront of the national primaries.

“There’s only one place in America where we have this kind of participation in the political process … and that’s here in New Hampshire,” he said. “New Hampshire must remain first in the election. I will do everything in my power to make sure that that’s the case.”

McCain said the Bush administration has made a number of mistakes in Iraq, but he remains confident that with a new strategy the United States will prevail. Abandoning military operations in Iraq and leaving the job unfinished, he said, would only encourage the nation’s enemies.

“We are now facing an implacable enemy that is a force of evil,” McCain said. “These people have taken an honorable religion and distorted it.”

Asked later to explain how he would defend himself against criticism of his support for the unpopular war, McCain said he would not compromise his convictions. “I can’t worry about that; I have to do what’s right,” he said. “How could I let any political ambition of mine interfere with what’s right for this country?”

McCain criticized the current administration for spending tax dollars irresponsibly and vowed to reform Social Security and Medicare. He said he would combat global warming by exploring green technology and other alternative energy sources. “If we’re really going to reduce greenhouse gases, nuclear power has to be part of the solution,” he said.

In response to a question, McCain addressed the recent uproar over shoddy conditions at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. “There’s no excuse for Walter Reed,” he said. “There’s no excuse for what happened there. It’s inexcusable and I will take responsibility for that.”

Addressing the issue of illegal immigrants in the United States, McCain said it was unreasonable to expect U.S. forces to corral and deport some 12 million aliens. He said people who recently crossed the border from Mexico should be sent back, while those who have lived in the country for a substantial period of time should pay fines and then file documentation to live here legally. Employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants, however, should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, he said.

A pro-life activist asked McCain to elaborate whether he supports what she called “fetal tissue research.” “I do support embryonic stem cell research because I believe it has the capability to relieve human suffering in a very big way,” McCain replied. He added that he has always fought for human rights, including the rights of unborn children, and he opposes abortion.

But McCain responded to the next question with a different perspective on global human rights. An Epping man asked the senator if he feels obligated to extend the same rights to suspected terrorists as he would to American citizens. McCain said he would consider the rights of foreign suspects but added they are not entitled to the same rights as American citizens. He called the terrorist suspects “evil and bad people” who had done many “bad things.”

McCain added that he would close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp if elected. This did not sit well with Hampton resident Chris Nevins, who believes the detention camp should remain open. “I think we need to have a justice system for this new type of criminal,” Nevins said moments after McCain concluded his speech. But Nevins said he agreed with most of McCain’s answers. “I’m impressed with his ability to respond to these tough questions, and I guess that’s what we need in our leaders,” he said.

Nevins remains undecided about who he will vote for in the N.H. primary, but fellow Hampton resident John Stump said he was leaning toward McCain. Stump’s father served in the same military squadron with McCain in Mississippi, and the two families lived just a few houses apart. Stump even baby-sat two of McCain’s children with his first wife.

“I have always appreciated everything that he has done and stood for,” he said. “I have no problem with everything that he said, really. I just don’t know if he’s got the people’s support.”

Exeter resident Michele Hauschlidt said she also leans toward supporting McCain. She shrugged off concerns that the senator’s support for the war would hurt his presidential chances. “Everything’s pretty unpopular among the general public,” she said.

McCain found himself swarmed by supporters and photographers as he made his way back to the bus with his wife, Cindy. Although many states plan to push up their primary dates to Feb. 5, he promised to stay focused on the Granite State with frequent visits over the next year and a half.

The 2008 N.H. primary date has not yet been decided. The 2004 N.H. primary was held on Jan. 27.

 
< Prev   Next >
dig, dug

After a rough start, the Phoenix Mars Lander is successfully analyzing dirt samples dug up from...

clumping

While the robot arm on the Phoenix Mars Lander has successfully delivered dirt to the lander, at...

scoops and dumps

On June 2, NASA’s Phoenix spacecraft lifted its first scoop of Martian soil as a test of...

greetings from the Martian arctic

On May 25, NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander successfully touched down in the Martian arctic in...

now with a pulsating carbon surface

Hidden right in the familiar Big Dipper, astronomers have discovered a new type of white dwarf...

ATV in space enounters rough patch

No, not an All Terrain Vehicle—an Automated Transfer Vehicle, which was launched by the...

and in this corner; taken too literally

and in this corner

Iran has launched a rocket into space from its own space center...

bright comet

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has probed the bright core of Comet 17P/Holmes, which...

extrasolar system

Astronomers have discovered a fifth planet circling 55 Cancri, a star beyond our solar system,...

the goddess who flew to the moon

On Monday, Nov. 5, China’s Chang’e 1 satellite successfully entered lunar orbit, only...

walking; now with more black holes

walking

Space Shuttle astronauts recently completed installing a new solar power...

massive darkness

news from space

we’ll take two
The National Security Space Office has issued a...

the dark side of Iapetus

the dark side of Iapetus

“The side of Iapetus that faces forward in its...

burst; ion power

burst

A recently detected burst of radio waves has stumped scientists, who have...

hollow Mars

NASA’s Mars Odyssey spacecraft has discovered entrances to seven possible caves on the...

the Victoria era; the inconvenient polar ice

the Victoria era NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has descended into...

crashing in Kazakhstan

A Russian Proton-M rocket carrying a Japanese communications satellite malfunctioned after...

aqua vitae

aqua vitae

NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, while observing a young solar...

galactic dominion

As if detailed satellite maps of the Earth weren’t enough, or a virtual globe that you can...

Music
Film
Boing Boing

Tweethearts: blogger proposes to nerd girlfriend over Twitter, she tweets back acceptance.

Panel finds Palin abused power; Judge orders email from her private accounts be preserved

Serialization of The Deal, Chapter 19

   
 
© 2008 The Wire

Piscataqua
Loco Coco's
RiverRun 125 x 60