McCain's a survivor, independent
As we near the end of another presidential campaign, it is useful to ask ourselves what we have learned about the candidates that we did not know before. When you reflect back on all the rallies, the speeches, the ads and the debates, what insights have we gained about their goals, their methods, their characters? I will turn to Barack Obama next. Today's subject is John McCain.
We knew a great deal about him. We knew he was a product of the military elite, the son and grandson of admirals, imbued with the patriotic impulses and sense of duty to country that is his family tradition. We also knew he had the capacity and willpower to endure and resist the terrible abuse he suffered in a North Vietnamese prison camp.
We knew he had the backbone to set his own course - a rebel defying authority - and that he carried that trait into politics, often challenging leaders of his party and wishes of fellow Republicans. We also knew he had a temper, redeemed by a self-mocking sense of humor, and a capacity for building genuine friendships across party lines.
We suspected, and soon confirmed, that he had limited interest in organization and management of large enterprises. His first effort at building a structure for the 2008 presidential race collapsed in near-bankruptcy, costing him the service of many longtime aides. The campaign that followed has been plagued by internal feuds and by McCain's inability to resolve them.
The shortcoming was intellectual as well as bureaucratic. Like Jimmy Carter, the only Naval Academy graduate to reach the Oval Office, McCain had an engineer's approach to policymaking. He had no large principles that he could apply to specific problems; each fresh question set off a search for a "practical" solution. He instinctively looked back to Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive era, with its high-mindedness and disdain for the politics of doling out favors to interest groups. But those instincts coexisted uneasily with his adherence to traditional, Reagan-era conservatism - a muscular foreign policy, a penchant for tax-cutting and a fondness for business.
McCain was handed a terrible political environment by the outgoing Bush administration - a legacy of war, debt and scandal that would have defeated any of the other aspirants for the nomination. But because McCain could not create a coherent vision of his own, he allowed Obama and the Democrats to convince voters of a falsehood: Electing McCain would in effect reward Bush with a third term.
A similar ambivalence clouded his relationship with the Republican Party. Neither rebel nor defender of the doctrines, he won its nomination by smart tactics and lucky circumstances in three primaries - New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida - without ever establishing himself as its legitimate spokesman.
His vice presidential choice, his best opportunity to put his stamp on the future, was made, typically, more on instinct than careful appraisal. McCain saw Sarah Palin as reinforcing his own reformer credentials.
The campaign has been costly in terms of McCain's reputation. He has been condemned for small-minded partisanship, not praised for his generous and important suggestion that major party candidates stump the country together, conducting weekly joint town hall meetings - an innovation Obama turned down.
The frustration for McCain and his closest associates is their belief that he is ready to practice the kind of post-partisan politics the country wants - which they believe Obama only talks about.
Should McCain win the election, it will demonstrate even more vividly than the earlier episodes in his life the survival instincts and capacity for overcoming the odds of this remarkably engaging man. If he becomes president, the country would have to hope this campaign has honed his leadership skills.
© 2008, Washington Post Writers Group