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Chuck Todd, NBC Political Director

Mark Murray, NBC Deputy Political Director

Domenico Montanaro, NBC News Political Reporter



McCain knocks Obama in kickoff speech

Posted: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 10:49 PM by Mark Murray

From NBC/NJ's Carrie Dann
KENNER, LA -- In a much-anticipated general election kickoff speech tonight, John McCain at once distanced himself from the current president, alluded to the Democrats' meandering path to the nomination, depicted Barack Obama as both inexperienced and beholden to special interests, and described Obama's major line of attack against him as a disingenuous scam.

Kicking off a 30-minute speech rife with criticisms of his newly minted rival, he warned that "you will hear from my opponent's campaign in every speech, every interview, every press release that I'm running for President Bush's third term."

McCain went on to accuse Barack Obama of an almost mindless repetition of that "false" notion. "He tries to drum it into your minds by constantly repeating it rather than debate honestly the very different directions he and I would take the country," he said.

The speech, scheduled to grab a slice of the primetime cable's political audiences, was set on the outskirts of New Orleans, Louisiana, a city that epitomizes for many the incompetence of governance during the Bush years. McCain used the backdrop to describe his history of head-butting with the unpopular current administration. "He and I have not seen eye to eye on many issues," he said of Bush. "We've disagreed over the conduct of the war in Iraq and the treatment of detainees; over out-of-control government spending and budget gimmicks; over energy policy and climate change; over defense spending that favored defense contractors over the public good."

As the sun set on an epic battle for the Democratic nomination, McCain's speech started off with the first decree -- from the mouth of one of its elite group of finalists -- that the primary season is officially at an end. "Tonight," he began, "we can say with confidence the primary season is over, and the general election campaign has begun."

McCain quickly offered a warm verbal embrace of that primary season's loser, his one-time nemesis Hillary Clinton. "The media often overlooked how compassionately she spoke to the concerns and dreams of millions of Americans, and she deserves a lot more appreciation than she sometimes received," he said, going on to note -- as he did in Nashville yesterday -- the historic trail that she has blazed. "As the father of three daughters, I owe her a debt for inspiring millions of women to believe there is no opportunity in this great country beyond their reach."

But for the almost-crowned Democratic nominee, McCain showed little such love. After pointing the finger at Obama for artificially strapping him to Bush's back, he continued his ongoing laundry list of grievances with Obama's stances on Iraq, meetings with rogue leaders, and strategies for energy independence. He described Obama as an inexperienced partisan beholden to special interests and reliant on big-government solutions. "That's not change we can believe in," he pronounced throughout the speech, mockingly referencing Obama's campaign slogan.

The 71-year old senator also took a shot as the age of his rival, 25-years his junior.  "You know, I have a few years on my opponent," he quipped, eliciting laughter and applause from the audience of over 500 at Kenner's Pontchartrain Center. "So I am surprised that a young man has bought in to so many failed ideas." In contrast to Obama's youth, he called the Illinois senator's proposed policies "old" and "tired" strategies that need not be "dusted off" again.

Without mentioning Obama by name in one section of his remarks, he also alluded to an arrogance that opponents depict as a motivator of Obama's youthful political career. "I don't seek the presidency on the presumption I'm blessed with such personal greatness that history has anointed me to save my country in its hour of need," he said. "I seek the office with the humility of a man who cannot forget my country saved me."

And, notably, he was not shy about describing Obama's path to the nomination as one that bucked the popular vote and relied heavily on influence from party elites. "Pundits and party elders have declared that Senator Obama will be my opponent," he said, soon after wrapping up his enthusiastic praise for Clinton. "He will be a formidable one. But I'm ready for the challenge, and determined to run this race in a way that does credit to our campaign and to the proud, decent and patriotic people I ask to lead."

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Comments

McCain is a weak candidate in a weak party. The only strategy that might make the Presidential race competitive is if the talking machine can racialize the election. Local (nashville) radio personalities have already begun. The Bush leaning pundits are not even touching McCain. They focus on weak arguments about people Obama has associated with. I have faith that Americans will vote on the candidates merits and not the same divisive politics that elected Bush/Rove/Chaney    
No matter how hard he dances and no matter what he and his lobbyist handlers thinks he has to say, McCain cannot distance himself from GW Bush.  Denial doesn't make it true.  He has supported Bush's War, wants to continue that same war with no idea or definition of what he thinks "victory" is, supports Bush's use of torture, votes as his lobbyist friends dictate, is against the G.I. Bill, was against the Bush tax cuts, now he's for them.  The list is endless.  The man flips and flops more than a fish out of water.  John McCain is Bush redux.  
McCain, I would have voted for you in a second in 2000. I thought you were submarined in SC.

After watching you abandon your outsider status to gain the support ofthe neocons and ultra conservatives in the republican race and to embrace the Bush policies that you so vigorously denounced not long ago, you no longer resemble the candidate that I would have campaigned for and voted for.

I am an independent with a liberal social policy, but a republican fiscal policy. I had been consistently disappointed with the republican party's hubris not long after they gained the control of congress in 94. After Bush took office government has gotten bigger, not smaller that I expected of the republicans. Bush has done the opposite of every sitting president before him by cutting taxes to pay for the war, but increasing our national debt by $3.5 TRILLION. Yes, TRILLION.

He has done the exact opposite that I expected a fiscal republican to do. I have lost faith in the republicans and you.

By the way, I want my habeas corpus back. Repeal that part of the military commissions act NOW.


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