McCain's next battleThe Senator could be Bush's big headache. He wants to raise hell
about campaign-finance reformBy James Carney
June 28, 1999
Web posted at: 11:47 a.m. EDT (1547 GMT)
When George W. Bush swept into Washington last week, the
Republican Party establishment threw itself at his feet.
Thirty-six G.O.P. Senators, 100 Congressmen and 2,000
well-tailored donors, many of them lobbyists, all paid homage to
the Texas Governor--a capital reception so warm and so lucrative
that even the composed candidate seemed caught up in the hype. To
the fawning Congressmen he gushed, "I look forward to working
with you," as though he had already been elected President. And
he has reason to be cocky. By the end of this week, he will have
raised more than $20 million--as much as all his G.O.P. rivals
combined--in less than four months.
But could there be a downside to Bush's embrace by his party's
leaders--and by the corporate special interests who lobby them?
Arizona Senator John McCain, Bush's rival for the G.O.P.
nomination, is counting on it. While Bush was being hailed by the
political-financial complex, McCain was plotting to blow it up.
The Senator has made his name in politics, in part, by pounding
his head against the wall of campaign-finance reform. So far, his
efforts have been thwarted by his Republican colleagues in
Congress. But this week McCain will launch the battle from a
different perch, in a campaign speech at the old town hall in
Bedford, N.H., the state holding the first presidential primary.
The moment will be poignant, even as some may try to dismiss it
as pointless. Senator Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican
who has led the three-year fight against McCain's bill, loves to
say, "This issue has never defeated anyone in the American
political process." Nor has it ever launched a presidential
campaign. Back in January even McCain's top advisers hoped to
persuade him that campaign-finance reform was a loser issue. They
quietly commissioned a poll of G.O.P. voters in four key primary
states to prove their point. But when the results came in, they
showed 60% of voters saying campaign-finance reform was
important, vs. just 15% saying it wasn't. "Voters want the system
changed," says John Weaver, McCain's political director.
Bush, for his part, bemoans the culture of partisanship and
gridlock in Washington but is mostly silent about the system that
funds it. He proposes lifting the $1,000 limit on individual
contributions and requiring full disclosure of contributors. But,
says McCain, "that's basically the system we have today. The
restrictions we have now are a facade." The Senator's current
plan, in his McCain-Feingold bill, would ban the unlimited
contributions known as "soft money" that corporations, lobbyists
and unions can give to national parties, and it would restrict
outside, allegedly "independent" groups from running ads to help
specific candidates.
But for McCain's reform plan to resonate with grass-roots
Republicans, he must pitch it in explicitly conservative terms.
"You're never going to get a simpler, flatter tax code unless you
reform the way we finance our campaigns," McCain says. "And
you're never going to get rid of pork-barrel spending and make
government smaller until you remove the special interests that
dominate our political process." Sources close to McCain say he
and his co-sponsor, Democrat Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, will
threaten to bring Senate business to a halt this month unless
G.O.P. leaders bring up the bill for debate and a vote.
If nothing else, that ought to train a spotlight on McCain and
give him a chance to stand as the Washington-based outsider
against the Austin-based insider. In a two-person primary race,
McCain hopes his personal story will implicitly carry a critique
of Bush's. At the age of 40, Bush was still finding himself in
Midland, Texas; McCain had already served as a naval aviator in
the Vietnam War and endured 5 1/2 years of hell as a prisoner of
war. And while Bush has used his father's name and connections
to get ahead in business and politics, McCain turned down
paternal protection when it mattered most. As the son of the
commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet during the war, he
resisted pressure from his North Vietnamese captors to go free
because he feared it would demoralize the troops.
Not surprisingly, that compelling story is making its way to
voters and bookstores very soon. The campaign has sent about
50,000 biographical videos to primary voters in New Hampshire.
And in September, McCain will launch a book tour promoting Faith
of My Fathers, a three-generation biography of his father and his
grandfather--both admirals--and the lessons of honor and patriotism
they taught him. If the tale catches on, Bush may wish to change
the subject--even to campaign-finance reform.
MORE TIME STORIES:
Cover Date: July 5, 1999
|