One thing that strikes me as funny in this is that the right-wingers are all 
decrying this, painting the Times as "that liberal rag". How quickly they 
forget that, back during the run-up to the War on Terror (reg, TM, copy), the 
Times was right in lockstep with the GOP in prosecuting the War. I guess 
they're only good as long as they're spouting *your* propaganda...

ravenadal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:                               
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080221/ap_on_el_pr/mccain_lobbyist
 
 McCain says report on lobbyist not true By LIBBY QUAID, Associated 
 
 1 hour, 44 minutes ago
  
 
 John McCain emphatically denied a romantic relationship with a female 
 telecommunications lobbyist on Thursday and said a report by The New 
 York Times suggesting favoritism for her clients is "not true."
 
 "I'm very disappointed in the article. It's not true," the likely 
 Republican presidential nominee said as his wife, Cindy, stood beside 
 him during a news conference called to address the matter.
 
 "I've served this nation honorably for more than half a century," 
 said McCain, a four-term Arizona senator and former Navy pilot. "At 
 no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."
 
 "I intend to move on," he added.
 
 McCain described the woman in question, lobbyist Vicki Iseman, as a 
 friend.
 
 The newspaper quoted anonymous aides as saying they had urged McCain 
 and Iseman to stay away from each other prior to his failed 
 presidential campaign in 2000. In its own follow-up story, The 
 Washington Post quoted longtime aide John Weaver, who split with 
 McCain last year, as saying he met with lobbyist Iseman and urged her 
 to steer clear of McCain.
 
 Weaver told the Times he arranged the meeting before the 2000 
 campaign after "a discussion among the campaign leadership" about 
 Iseman.
 
 But McCain said he was unaware of any such conversation, and denied 
 that his aides ever tried to talk to him about his interactions with 
 Iseman.
 
 "I never discussed it with John Weaver. As far as I know, there was 
 no necessity for it," McCain said. "I don't know anything about it," 
 he added. "John Weaver is a friend of mine. He remains a friend of 
 mine. But I certainly didn't know anything of that nature."
 
 His wife also said she was disappointed with the newspaper.
 
 "More importantly, my children and I not only trust my husband, but 
 know that he would never do anything to not only disappoint our 
 family, but disappoint the people of America. He's a man of great 
 character," Cindy McCain said.
 
 The couple smiled throughout the questioning at a Toledo hotel.
 
 "We think the story speaks for itself," Times executive editor Bill 
 Keller said in a written statement Thursday. "On the timing, our 
 policy is we publish stories when they are ready."
 
 McCain's remaining rival for the Republican nomination, former 
 Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, called McCain "a good decent honorable 
 man" and said he accepted McCain's response.
 
 "I've campaigned now on the same stage or platform with John McCain 
 for 14 months. I only know him to be a man of integrity," Huckabee 
 said in Houston. "Today he denied any of that was true. I take him at 
 his word. For me to get into it is completely immaterial."
 
 The published reports said McCain and Iseman each denied having a 
 romantic relationship. Neither story asserted that there was a 
 romantic relationship and offered no evidence that there was, 
 reporting only that aides worried about the appearance of McCain 
 having close ties to a lobbyist with business before the Senate 
 Commerce Committee on which McCain served.
 
 The stories also allege that McCain wrote letters and pushed 
 legislation involving television station ownership that would have 
 benefited Iseman's clients.
 
 In late 1999, McCain twice wrote letters to the Federal 
 Communications Commission on behalf of Florida-based Paxson 
 Communications — which had paid Iseman as its lobbyist — urging quick 
 consideration of a proposal to buy a television station license in 
 Pittsburgh. At the time, Paxson's chief executive, Lowell W. "Bud" 
 Paxson, also was a major contributor to McCain's 2000 presidential 
 campaign. 
 
 McCain did not urge the FCC commissioners to approve the proposal, 
 but he asked for speedy consideration of the deal, which was pending 
 from two years earlier. In an unusual response, then-FCC Chairman 
 William Kennard complained that McCain's request "comes at a 
 sensitive time in the deliberative process" and "could have 
 procedural and substantive impacts on the commission's deliberations 
 and, thus, on the due process rights of the parties." 
 
 McCain wrote the letters after he received more than $20,000 in 
 contributions from Paxson executives and lobbyists. Paxson also lent 
 McCain his company's jet at least four times during 1999 for campaign 
 travel. 
 
 "Riding on the airplane was an accepted practice," McCain said 
 Thursday, adding that he supported a change in rules since then. As 
 for the letters, he said: "I said I'm not telling you how to make a 
 decision; I'm just telling you that you should move forward and make 
 a decision on this issue. I believe that was appropriate." 
 
 Since The New York Times story was published Wednesday night, the 
 McCain campaign has sought to discredit it, distributing lengthy 
 statements and deploying senior advisers to appear on news shows. The 
 campaign calls the story a smear campaign to destroy the Republican 
 nominee-in-waiting. 
 
 Keller, the Times editor, explained that the paper's judgment that 
 the story was ready to print "means the facts have been nailed down 
 to our satisfaction, the subjects have all been given a full and fair 
 chance to respond, and the reporting has been written up with all the 
 proper context and caveats. This story was no exception. It was a 
 long time in the works. It reached my desk late Tuesday afternoon. 
 After a final edit and a routine check by our lawyers, we published 
 it." 
 
 Robert Bennett, a Washington attorney representing McCain, told 
 NBC's "Today" show that McCain's staff provided the Times 
 with "approximately 12 instances where Senator McCain took positions 
 adverse to this lobbyist's clients and her public relations firm's 
 clients," but none of the examples were included in the paper's 
 story. 
 
 "There is no evidence that John McCain ever breached the public trust 
 and that is the issue and the only issue," said Bennett, who once 
 represented former President Clinton, on Thursday. 
 
 McCain said he won't allow the reports to distract him from his 
 presidential campaign. 
 
 "I will focus my attention in this campaign on the big issues and on 
 the challenges that face this country," he said. 
 
 He defended his integrity last December, after he was questioned 
 about reports that the Times was investigating allegations of 
 legislative favoritism by the Arizona Republican and that his aides 
 had been trying to dissuade the newspaper from publishing a story. 
 
 "I've never done any favors for anybody — lobbyist or special-
 interest group. That's a clear, 24-year record," he told reporters. 
 
 McCain and four other senators were accused two decades ago of trying 
 to influence banking regulators on behalf of Charles Keating, a 
 savings and loan financier later convicted of securities fraud. The 
 Senate Ethics Committee ultimately decided that McCain had used "poor 
 judgment" but that his actions "were not improper" and warranted no 
 penalty. 
 
 McCain has said that episode helped spur his drive to change campaign 
 finance laws in an attempt to reduce the influence of money in 
 politics.
 
 Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The 
 information contained in the AP News report may not be published, 
 broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written 
 authority of The Associated Press. 
 
 
     
                               


"There is no reason Good can't triumph over Evil, if only angels will get 
organized along the lines of the Mafia." -Kurt Vonnegut, "A Man Without A 
Country"
       
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