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‘Rock Bottom’: Anti-McCain Comments Spark Uproar

    Advertisement Family and congressional colleagues pushed back Friday against attacks on cancer-stricken John McCain, including one by a White House aide who reportedly … Continue reading ‘Rock Bottom’: Anti-McCain Comments Spark Uproar


WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 18: Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) is trailed by reporters in the Senate Subway before the Senate takes up the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2018, on Capitol Hill September 18, 2017 in Washington, DC. The NDAA authorizes levels of defense spending. Mark Wilson/Getty Images/AFP

 

This file photo shows US Senator, John McCain (R-AZ), trailed by reporters in the Senate Subway on Capitol Hill September 18, 2017 in Washington, DC.  Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images/AFP

 

Family and congressional colleagues pushed back Friday against attacks on cancer-stricken John McCain, including one by a White House aide who reportedly said the senator’s opposition to a presidential nominee did not matter because “he’s dying anyway.”

CNN and other media said that the offensive remark, after McCain came out against CIA director nominee Gina Haspel over her role in Bush-era enhanced interrogation techniques, came from a White House communications aide named Kelly Sadler.

CNN quoted a White House official as saying Sadler, speaking Thursday at a staff meeting, meant the comment as a joke but that it flopped.

Another extraordinary attack against McCain by a fellow military veteran and commentator also stunned much of Washington Thursday, when retired US Air Force lieutenant general Thomas McInerney said he knows torture works because it made McCain spill sensitive information to his captors during nearly six years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

“The fact is, with John McCain, it worked on John. That’s why they call him Songbird John,” McInerney said on Fox Business Network.

The attacks, remarkable for their bluntness, triggered swift reaction from across the political spectrum, with lawmakers demanding an apology from President Donald Trump himself.

“People have wondered when decency would hit rock bottom with this administration. It happened yesterday,” said Democratic former vice president Joe Biden, who served with McCain for decades in the Senate.

“Given this White House’s trail of disrespect toward John and others, this staffer is not the exception to the rule; she is the epitome of it.”

Meghan McCain, a conservative commentator on ABC’s popular morning talk show “The View,” delivered an eloquent defense of her father, who is battling brain cancer at home in Arizona.

Her family, she said on the show, is “really strong” and “there’s so much more love and prayer and amazing energy being generated towards us than anything negative at all.”

She also had pointed words for the White House about Sadler.

“I don’t understand what kind of environment you’re working in when that would be acceptable and then you can come to work the next day and still have a job,” she said.

Her father is “all about character and bipartisanship and something greater than yourself, and believing in this country,” Meghan McCain said, before adding a stinging message to the critics: “Nobody’s going to remember you.”

‘Speechless’

Reaction poured in from members of Congress in support of their colleague.

“I am left speechless and with a sense of horror about the insensitive, crass and cruel remarks by a White House aide reflecting the administration’s position on a heroic American’s courageous fight,” House Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee wrote.

“Is there any decency in this administration and where is the apology from @realDonaldTrump?”

House Republican Walter Jones branded the attacks “outrageous and unacceptable.”

Over at Fox Business, program host Charles Payne issued a personal apology to McCain and his family, saying he did not hear the remark as the network’s control room was speaking into his earpiece.

“I regret I did not catch this remark, as it should have been challenged,” Payne said.

“As a proud military veteran and son of a Vietnam Vet these words neither reflect my or the network’s feelings about Senator McCain, or his remarkable service and sacrifice to this country.”

McCain has been a vocal Trump critic.

Trump, for his part, once mocked McCain’s war service, saying during the presidential campaign that “I like people that weren’t captured.”

AFP