McCain Has Mini Meltdown at Dinner with Journalists

Does Sen. John McCain have the temperament and judgment to be president? His behavior at a dinner with journalists last week indicates he may be too emotionally volatile to make it through the campaign without embarassing himself.

Arianna Huffington was at the dinner, and wrote about it (”John McCain Bites My Head Off”) here:

McCain’s “volcanic” temper is legendary and there were concerns in GOP circles during the 2000 campaign that his tantrums could become an issue.

Toward the end of the conversation, I raised my hand and asked McCain:

“Given that you’ve said that you are ’scared to death that it’s going to be a very hot spring in Afghanistan,’ and given that you have also said, repeatedly, that only a substantial increase in troops in Iraq would make a real difference, why not send the 21,000 troops headed to Iraq, in what is clearly an act of desperation, to Afghanistan instead?”

During his response, McCain equated those opposing his position with “the far left.”

“Do you consider Sam Brownback part of the far left?” I jumped in.

The Senator flared and told me that if I’d only let him finish his answer instead of interrupting, we could have “a civil discussion.”

He then continued on about why he supports the escalation … Along the way, he denied that he had used the phrase “the far left.”

Wow, I thought, the Straight Talk Express has run so far off the rails McCain is now denying things he’d said in front of close to two-dozen note-taking journalists not half-a-minute before.

I pressed on: “You keep presenting the Iraq debate in terms of left vs right and Democrat vs Republican, when there are clearly major rifts in your own party over the direction we should take. And you yourself have changed your mind about the number of troops we need.”

With a growing edge in his voice, McCain explained that he had sat down with General Patraeus. “He looked me in the eye,” said McCain, “and told me ‘I can do it with 21,000. And if I can’t, I’ll ask for more.’” McCain went on to say he believes that in a country of 300 million we should be able to have a large enough volunteer army to do whatever we need to do.

“That’s all very good in theory,” I replied, “but, in practice, where are these additional troops going to come from? And you keep saying that the American people are ‘frustrated’ about Iraq, which totally minimizes the outrage there is at continuing to be mislead by this administration.”

He had clearly had it with me and told me that since what I had just said was a statement and not a question, he didn’t have to respond.

McCain’s bad temper is legendary and there have been longstanding concerns about it in GOP circles. For example, in 1999, during McCain’s first presidential bid, the Washington Post reported that Arizona GOP officials who had felt the wrath of McCain’s “volcanic” temper were fearful his tantrums could become a factor in the 2000 race. After McCain won the New Hampshire primary, operatives for then.Gov. George W. Bush started a whispering campaign in South Carolina against McCain that characterized him as “unstable.”

Last Sunday, on “Meet the Press,” Sen. McCain seemed vey depressed. It appears something’s going on behind the scenes with the GOP’s putative frontrunner.

UPDATE: Republican tool Bob Novak has a column up criticizing McCain’s performance on MTP:

Democratic strategists … were surprised and delighted by his dour appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press” last Sunday. One Democratic leader referred to McCain’s performance … as “comatose.” A Republican adviser to McCain said it was one of the worst performances ever on “Meet the Press.”

9 Responses »

  1. Chris Rose January 28, 2007 @ 6:16 pm

    While I’m no fan of John McCain, this certainly wouldn’t qualify as a “meltdown”.

  2. J Shanahan January 29, 2007 @ 6:52 am

    McCain most likely made a deal with Rove: that if he supports their position now, they’ll help him steal/win the 2008 election by putting the Rove machine at his disposal.
    He really has lost it – and he was about the only republican I actually believed.

  3. Tony Poodlepants January 29, 2007 @ 7:19 am

    “Flip Flop” McCain won’t make it to 2008. He should have learned an obvious lesson from 2006: if you support Bush’s policies, you will cease to exist.

  4. V. LaRoche January 29, 2007 @ 7:37 am

    Poor Whore McCain, getting whipped with a coat hanger by his pimp.

    I knew McCain was a bit loose in the wheels when he pumped his fist in the air in 1999 and said of his fellow Presidential candidates, “We will KILL them!”

    And I decided back then that he was too rickety emotionally to be a good President.

  5. mlb January 29, 2007 @ 9:17 am

    I don’t especially care if McCain can’t always control his emotions. It’s his unreasonable adherence to failed policies that make him unfit to hold office.

    His recent attack on the First Amendment, in the form of a proposal to fine bloggers up to $300,000 for “offensive” statements, also demonstrates that he does not believe in the core principles upon which our country was founded, and therefore does not belong in our government.

  6. Matthew January 29, 2007 @ 1:04 pm

    John McCain has pulled perhaps the greatest trick in modern American politics: he has convinced the media that he is somehow a “maverick” of the Republican party. This prick could go around kicking homeless puppies all day and the clowns on CNN would simply fawn over how uninterested he is in others’ opinions. He is a whore like all other federal politicians and, worse, he made some sort of deal with Karl Rove, the man who spread rumors of McCain’s illegitmate black child (an Indian orphan McCain adopted). He gutted the campaign finance reform bill with his name on it to ensure that no substantive change would occur that would somehow interfere with politicians selling off the country piecemeal to multinationals in the name of democracy and free markets. And now this fucker prances around national television parroting Bush’s vision in Iraq and conveniently forgetting his own role in creating this mini-genocide? Applaud the maverick, everyone. Applaud.

  7. R. Dewar January 29, 2007 @ 3:17 pm

    McCain is the Dr. Faustus of the GOP..dark deals with Karl Rove in the background. He is the losing candidate in the election.

  8. opeluboy January 29, 2007 @ 4:01 pm

    Gee. Wonder when Jon Stewart will have him back on the Daily Show? I guess he’ll have to get a crush on some other warmonger now.

  9. warren schaich January 30, 2007 @ 7:36 am

    McCain is as freightening on war escalation as is Bush. Would he have been an asset to Nazi Germany as they stormed through Europe in an attempt to build an armed empire?

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