House GOP Aides: McCain ‘Not Familiar With The Details’ Of The
Financial Bailout»
http://thinkprogress.org/2008/09/26/bailout-plan-details/
Bailout negotiations “dissolved into a verbal brawl” at the White
House yesterday, as some House Republicans, led by Eric Cantor (R-VA),
said they wouldn’t back a bipartisan negotiation on the package. The
House GOP faction stunned the participants at the meeting yesterday by
announcing their own plan which “advocates tax cuts and relaxed
regulations.”

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has said the House GOP proposal would
not work. “Democratic leaders questioned McCain’s involvement in the
House Republicans’ opposition to the plan.” McCain met with House GOP
leaders before heading to the White House, but neither party seemed to
know what they were talking about:

Boehner and McCain discussed the bailout plan, but Republican
leadership aides described the conversation as somewhat surreal.
Neither man was familiar with the details of the proposal being
pressed by House conservatives, and up to the moment they departed for
the White House yesterday afternoon, neither had seen any description
beyond news reports.

At 1:25 p.m., McCain left Boehner’s office through a back door,
walking across the Capitol’s rotunda to the applause of tourists.
Graham conceded the group knew little about the plan the nominee had
come to Washington to try to shape.

At the bipartisan White House meeting that McCain “didn’t speak until
43 minutes into the meeting.” He “sat silently for more than 40
minutes, more observer than leader, and then offered only a vague
sense of where he stood, said people in the meeting.”

Sen. Chris Dodd said, “Instead of being a rescue plan for our economy
it was a rescue plan for John McCain.” Sen. Chuck Schumer urged Bush
to “respectfully tell Sen. McCain to get out of town. He’s not
helping.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid added, “We had
[Republican] Senator [Bob] Bennett, a high ranking official, who said
these are the principles. And then, guess who came to town? And it all
fell apart.”

McCain’s handling of the negotiations serves to underscore his comment
in Dec. 2007 that he is “not an expert on Wall Street” and “not an
expert of some of this stuff”:




McCain still won’t say what his position is on the bailout. As Fox’s
Carl Cameron reported, McCain has “studiously not taken a position.”

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