On the morning of Wednesday, Sept. 24, John McCain convened a meeting in his suite at the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan. Among the handful of campaign officials in attendance were McCain's chief campaign strategist, Steve Schmidt, and his other two top advisers: Rick Davis, the campaign manager; and Mark Salter, McCain's longtime speechwriter. The senator's ears were already throbbing with bad news from economic advisers and from House Republican leaders who had told him that only a small handful in their ranks were willing to support the $700 billion bailout of the banking industry proposed by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. . . ."Defining moments" = idiotic stunt that blew the election.
Schmidt pushed for going all in: suspending the campaign, recommending that the first debate be postponed, parachuting into Washington and forging a legislative solution to the financial crisis for which McCain could then claim credit. Exactly how McCain could convincingly play a sober bipartisan problem-solver after spending the previous few weeks garbed as a populist truth teller was anything but clear. But Schmidt and others convinced McCain that it was worth the gamble.
Schmidt in particular was a believer in these kinds of defining moments. . . .
Stephen Ireland – founder of Pride in Surrey jailed for r-ping an
‘extremely vulnerable’ boy he met on Grindr, possessing child p-rn
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Stephen Ireland, aged 41, co-founded Pride in Surrey in 2018 and was its
director until 2024. He was convicted of
The post Stephen Ireland – founder of P...
2 hours ago
No, no, you blew the punchline. Let me amend:
ReplyDelete"And he would have gotten away with it, too, if it wasn't for you meddling kids!"
Can politicians think on their own? Even Trig knew it was a bad idea...
ReplyDelete