mccain affair
You can find videos, info, news and photos about mccain affair.
Google News (news about mccain affair)
Youtube (videos about mccain affair)
28/08/08Obama: I'm ready to face John McCainDENVER, Colorado (CNN) -- Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama laid out his credentials to take on and beat Republican candidate John McCain in the fall election. Obama compared himself to McCain on domestic and foreign policy in an impassioned speech before a cheering crowd at the Democratic National Convention Thursday."If John McCain wants to have a debate about who has the temperament, and judgment, to serve as the next commander in chief, that's a debate I'm ready to have," he told supporters at the Invesco Stadium in Denver, Colorado.Obama was greeted by tens of thousands of cheering supporters chanting "yes we can."He called upon Americans to help usher in an era of change after eight years of what he called failed policies."Change happens because the American people demand it -- because they rise up and insist on new ideas and new leadership, a new politics for a new time," he said."This moment, this election, is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive."He described a humble upbringing by his grandfather, a World War II veteran, and grandmother, who he said worked her way up from the secretarial pool to middle-management."I don't know what kind of lives John McCain thinks that celebrities lead, but this has been mine," he said. "These are my heroes. Theirs are the stories that shaped me. And it is on their behalf that I intend to win this election and keep our promise alive as president of the United States." Video Watch Obama accept the historic nomination » He brushed aside critiques from his Republican opponent, accusing him of being out of touch."It's not because John McCain doesn't care. it's because John McCain doesn't get it," he said of economic problems facing the country.Point by point, he addressed McCain's policies on the Iraq war, the economy, offshore drilling and health care, accusing him of pursuing the same policies as the Bush administration. He also said his judgment was better on foreign affairs, accusing McCain of turning his sights to Iraq days after the September 11 attacks when resources and attention should have been on Afghanistan."John McCain likes to say that he'll follow bin Laden to the Gates of Hell -- but he won't even go to the cave where he lives," he said to cheers.
Author: TerminoSur
Keywords: término sur Obama accept dnc democratic national Sarah Palin Speech denver america votes 08 2008 mccain Mitt Rom
Added: August 29, 2008
The New Republic's Dayo Olopade interviews Florida Congressman Robert Wexler on the DNC, Barack Obama's Presidential qualifications, and whether to reign in executive powers widened under the Bush Administration in favor of civil liberties.FORA.tv coverage of the DNC: http://fora.tv/topic/democratic_conventionThe New Republic on FORA.tv: http://fora.tv/partner/new_republic-----Robert Wexler is a Democratic member of Congress serving his sixth term in the House of Representatives. Wexler has been named one of the "50 Most Effective Legislators in Congress," by the influential magazine Congressional Quarterly and was named to the Forward 50 list as one of the most influential leaders in the American Jewish community.Congressman Wexler sits on three committees: the House Commitee on Foreign Affairs, where he serves as Chairman of the Subcommittee on Europe; the House Judiciary Commitee; and the House Committee on Financial Services.Dayo Olopade is a Reporter-Researcher for the New Republic.
Author: ForaTv
Keywords: barack obama john mccain impeach impeachment george bush president election 2008 civil rights liberties constitution
Added: August 29, 2008
28/08/08Obama: I'm ready to face John McCainDENVER, Colorado (CNN) -- Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama laid out his credentials to take on and beat Republican candidate John McCain in the fall election. Obama compared himself to McCain on domestic and foreign policy in an impassioned speech before a cheering crowd at the Democratic National Convention Thursday."If John McCain wants to have a debate about who has the temperament, and judgment, to serve as the next commander in chief, that's a debate I'm ready to have," he told supporters at the Invesco Stadium in Denver, Colorado.Obama was greeted by tens of thousands of cheering supporters chanting "yes we can."He called upon Americans to help usher in an era of change after eight years of what he called failed policies."Change happens because the American people demand it -- because they rise up and insist on new ideas and new leadership, a new politics for a new time," he said."This moment, this election, is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive."He described a humble upbringing by his grandfather, a World War II veteran, and grandmother, who he said worked her way up from the secretarial pool to middle-management."I don't know what kind of lives John McCain thinks that celebrities lead, but this has been mine," he said. "These are my heroes. Theirs are the stories that shaped me. And it is on their behalf that I intend to win this election and keep our promise alive as president of the United States." Video Watch Obama accept the historic nomination » He brushed aside critiques from his Republican opponent, accusing him of being out of touch."It's not because John McCain doesn't care. it's because John McCain doesn't get it," he said of economic problems facing the country.Point by point, he addressed McCain's policies on the Iraq war, the economy, offshore drilling and health care, accusing him of pursuing the same policies as the Bush administration. He also said his judgment was better on foreign affairs, accusing McCain of turning his sights to Iraq days after the September 11 attacks when resources and attention should have been on Afghanistan."John McCain likes to say that he'll follow bin Laden to the Gates of Hell -- but he won't even go to the cave where he lives," he said to cheers.
Author: TerminoSur
Keywords: término sur Obama accept dnc democratic national convention speech denver Sarah Palin colorado america votes 08 2008 mccain Romney of Massachusetts vp vice president the united states viva méxico discurso los broncos Invesco Field stadium estadio
Added: August 29, 2008
OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH PT.1 DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial It wasn't a rock concert or a revival meeting. And despite the fireworks and the neo-Classical columns lining the stage and giant television screens, Senator Barack Obama did not look like the lead in "Oedipus at Colonus." Mr. Obama, wearing a flag pin and a confident mien, looked like a presidential candidate accepting the nomination of the Democratic Party.The speech was draped in American flags and weighted with symbolism — the timing coincided with the 45th anniversary of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, and the place echoed John F. Kennedy's acceptance speech in 1960 in an outdoor stadium in Los Angeles.Mr. Obama quoted President Kennedy but waited until the end to allude to Dr. King. And he presented himself as a postracial candidate running on the content of his character by mentioning the civil rights leader only once, and not by name, but as "a young preacher from Georgia" who taught Americans that "all together, our dreams can be one."The finale of a political convention is a little like a wedding: the bride is always radiant, and the nominee is always stirring. In an unusual turn, even Senator John McCain, the expected Republican nominee, felt compelled to pay tribute to Mr. Obama's historic milestone with a television advertisement congratulating his opponent on "a job well done." (No good ad goes unpunished: after Mr. McCain's spot on CNN came a Mutual of Omaha commercial about retirement plans for the elderly, and another promising to reverse baldness.)Critics worried and commentators warned that the stadium rally would look too grandiose or gaudy. But television forces intimacy on even the largest gatherings. It was only when the cameras pulled back to a wide overhead shot that viewers could fathom the vastness of the crowd. Mostly, they saw Mr. Obama's face and close-ups of his supporters in the audience, especially African-Americans moved to tears by the moment.The prime-time portion of the spectacle was devised to play down race and highlight Mr. Obama's presidential stature: Stevie Wonder sang "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," but a group of retired generals and Susan Eisenhower, a Russian affairs expert who is the granddaughter of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, waxed lyrical about the senator's readiness for the Oval Office.Mr. Obama brought the crowd to its feet many times to cheer and applaud, but perhaps just as importantly for audiences back home, for almost 50 minutes he silenced the ceaseless chatter of television anchors and commentators who had insistently put their own stamp and faces on one of the most exciting political conventions in modern times.People do want to watch: the audience for cable news coverage this week was about double what it was in 2004. Yet despite the huge public fascination, the three major networks limited their coverage to an hour a night, a prime-time patchwork of highlight reels, catchup snippets of live speeches, and commentary.Anchors at conventions used to serve as omniscient narrators; at this convention, they mostly served as human V-chips blocking live speeches with their own palaver and predictions.The broadcast networks long ago ceded gavel-to-gavel coverage to cable and, more recently, to the Internet and news Web sites. Concerned citizens have more ways than ever to follow political events, but it requires ingenuity and patience to cobble together a coherent narrative.And even the 24-hour cable news channels proved unreliable at times, giving too much screen time to their gassiest anchors.Of the three cable news networks, CNN was the least intrusive: Wolf Blitzer and his colleagues were willing to let speakers speak for themselves. When Martin Luther King III spoke on Thursday, so did Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who chose to entertain his viewers with a Doonesbury cartoon about Mr. Obama and the Clintons that also featured Mr. Olbermann and his co-host, Chris Matthews. (Fox News mostly focused on Mr. McCain's possible choice for a running mate, but raced back to the convention when Sheryl Crow took the stage.)It's a bad reading of the audience. For most of the convention, CNN — staid, stable and anchored by fewer egomaniacs — won higher ratings than the other cable news channels, as well as ABC and CBS. And Wednesday, CNN was neck and neck with NBC, and for a while even ahead, suggesting that when a political event is this interesting, television commentators are less so.OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Author: TheKaraokeBandit
Keywords: OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Added: August 28, 2008
OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH PT.1 DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial It wasn't a rock concert or a revival meeting. And despite the fireworks and the neo-Classical columns lining the stage and giant television screens, Senator Barack Obama did not look like the lead in "Oedipus at Colonus." Mr. Obama, wearing a flag pin and a confident mien, looked like a presidential candidate accepting the nomination of the Democratic Party.The speech was draped in American flags and weighted with symbolism — the timing coincided with the 45th anniversary of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, and the place echoed John F. Kennedy's acceptance speech in 1960 in an outdoor stadium in Los Angeles.Mr. Obama quoted President Kennedy but waited until the end to allude to Dr. King. And he presented himself as a postracial candidate running on the content of his character by mentioning the civil rights leader only once, and not by name, but as "a young preacher from Georgia" who taught Americans that "all together, our dreams can be one."The finale of a political convention is a little like a wedding: the bride is always radiant, and the nominee is always stirring. In an unusual turn, even Senator John McCain, the expected Republican nominee, felt compelled to pay tribute to Mr. Obama's historic milestone with a television advertisement congratulating his opponent on "a job well done." (No good ad goes unpunished: after Mr. McCain's spot on CNN came a Mutual of Omaha commercial about retirement plans for the elderly, and another promising to reverse baldness.)Critics worried and commentators warned that the stadium rally would look too grandiose or gaudy. But television forces intimacy on even the largest gatherings. It was only when the cameras pulled back to a wide overhead shot that viewers could fathom the vastness of the crowd. Mostly, they saw Mr. Obama's face and close-ups of his supporters in the audience, especially African-Americans moved to tears by the moment.The prime-time portion of the spectacle was devised to play down race and highlight Mr. Obama's presidential stature: Stevie Wonder sang "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," but a group of retired generals and Susan Eisenhower, a Russian affairs expert who is the granddaughter of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, waxed lyrical about the senator's readiness for the Oval Office.Mr. Obama brought the crowd to its feet many times to cheer and applaud, but perhaps just as importantly for audiences back home, for almost 50 minutes he silenced the ceaseless chatter of television anchors and commentators who had insistently put their own stamp and faces on one of the most exciting political conventions in modern times.People do want to watch: the audience for cable news coverage this week was about double what it was in 2004. Yet despite the huge public fascination, the three major networks limited their coverage to an hour a night, a prime-time patchwork of highlight reels, catchup snippets of live speeches, and commentary.Anchors at conventions used to serve as omniscient narrators; at this convention, they mostly served as human V-chips blocking live speeches with their own palaver and predictions.The broadcast networks long ago ceded gavel-to-gavel coverage to cable and, more recently, to the Internet and news Web sites. Concerned citizens have more ways than ever to follow political events, but it requires ingenuity and patience to cobble together a coherent narrative.And even the 24-hour cable news channels proved unreliable at times, giving too much screen time to their gassiest anchors.Of the three cable news networks, CNN was the least intrusive: Wolf Blitzer and his colleagues were willing to let speakers speak for themselves. When Martin Luther King III spoke on Thursday, so did Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who chose to entertain his viewers with a Doonesbury cartoon about Mr. Obama and the Clintons that also featured Mr. Olbermann and his co-host, Chris Matthews. (Fox News mostly focused on Mr. McCain's possible choice for a running mate, but raced back to the convention when Sheryl Crow took the stage.)It's a bad reading of the audience. For most of the convention, CNN — staid, stable and anchored by fewer egomaniacs — won higher ratings than the other cable news channels, as well as ABC and CBS. And Wednesday, CNN was neck and neck with NBC, and for a while even ahead, suggesting that when a political event is this interesting, television commentators are less so.OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Author: TheKaraokeBandit
Keywords: OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Added: August 28, 2008
OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH PT.1 DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial It wasn't a rock concert or a revival meeting. And despite the fireworks and the neo-Classical columns lining the stage and giant television screens, Senator Barack Obama did not look like the lead in "Oedipus at Colonus." Mr. Obama, wearing a flag pin and a confident mien, looked like a presidential candidate accepting the nomination of the Democratic Party.The speech was draped in American flags and weighted with symbolism — the timing coincided with the 45th anniversary of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, and the place echoed John F. Kennedy's acceptance speech in 1960 in an outdoor stadium in Los Angeles.Mr. Obama quoted President Kennedy but waited until the end to allude to Dr. King. And he presented himself as a postracial candidate running on the content of his character by mentioning the civil rights leader only once, and not by name, but as "a young preacher from Georgia" who taught Americans that "all together, our dreams can be one."The finale of a political convention is a little like a wedding: the bride is always radiant, and the nominee is always stirring. In an unusual turn, even Senator John McCain, the expected Republican nominee, felt compelled to pay tribute to Mr. Obama's historic milestone with a television advertisement congratulating his opponent on "a job well done." (No good ad goes unpunished: after Mr. McCain's spot on CNN came a Mutual of Omaha commercial about retirement plans for the elderly, and another promising to reverse baldness.)Critics worried and commentators warned that the stadium rally would look too grandiose or gaudy. But television forces intimacy on even the largest gatherings. It was only when the cameras pulled back to a wide overhead shot that viewers could fathom the vastness of the crowd. Mostly, they saw Mr. Obama's face and close-ups of his supporters in the audience, especially African-Americans moved to tears by the moment.The prime-time portion of the spectacle was devised to play down race and highlight Mr. Obama's presidential stature: Stevie Wonder sang "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," but a group of retired generals and Susan Eisenhower, a Russian affairs expert who is the granddaughter of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, waxed lyrical about the senator's readiness for the Oval Office.Mr. Obama brought the crowd to its feet many times to cheer and applaud, but perhaps just as importantly for audiences back home, for almost 50 minutes he silenced the ceaseless chatter of television anchors and commentators who had insistently put their own stamp and faces on one of the most exciting political conventions in modern times.People do want to watch: the audience for cable news coverage this week was about double what it was in 2004. Yet despite the huge public fascination, the three major networks limited their coverage to an hour a night, a prime-time patchwork of highlight reels, catchup snippets of live speeches, and commentary.Anchors at conventions used to serve as omniscient narrators; at this convention, they mostly served as human V-chips blocking live speeches with their own palaver and predictions.The broadcast networks long ago ceded gavel-to-gavel coverage to cable and, more recently, to the Internet and news Web sites. Concerned citizens have more ways than ever to follow political events, but it requires ingenuity and patience to cobble together a coherent narrative.And even the 24-hour cable news channels proved unreliable at times, giving too much screen time to their gassiest anchors.Of the three cable news networks, CNN was the least intrusive: Wolf Blitzer and his colleagues were willing to let speakers speak for themselves. When Martin Luther King III spoke on Thursday, so did Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who chose to entertain his viewers with a Doonesbury cartoon about Mr. Obama and the Clintons that also featured Mr. Olbermann and his co-host, Chris Matthews. (Fox News mostly focused on Mr. McCain's possible choice for a running mate, but raced back to the convention when Sheryl Crow took the stage.)It's a bad reading of the audience. For most of the convention, CNN — staid, stable and anchored by fewer egomaniacs — won higher ratings than the other cable news channels, as well as ABC and CBS. And Wednesday, CNN was neck and neck with NBC, and for a while even ahead, suggesting that when a political event is this interesting, television commentators are less so.OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Author: TheKaraokeBandit
Keywords: OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Added: August 28, 2008
OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH PT.1 DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial It wasn't a rock concert or a revival meeting. And despite the fireworks and the neo-Classical columns lining the stage and giant television screens, Senator Barack Obama did not look like the lead in "Oedipus at Colonus." Mr. Obama, wearing a flag pin and a confident mien, looked like a presidential candidate accepting the nomination of the Democratic Party.The speech was draped in American flags and weighted with symbolism — the timing coincided with the 45th anniversary of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, and the place echoed John F. Kennedy's acceptance speech in 1960 in an outdoor stadium in Los Angeles.Mr. Obama quoted President Kennedy but waited until the end to allude to Dr. King. And he presented himself as a postracial candidate running on the content of his character by mentioning the civil rights leader only once, and not by name, but as "a young preacher from Georgia" who taught Americans that "all together, our dreams can be one."The finale of a political convention is a little like a wedding: the bride is always radiant, and the nominee is always stirring. In an unusual turn, even Senator John McCain, the expected Republican nominee, felt compelled to pay tribute to Mr. Obama's historic milestone with a television advertisement congratulating his opponent on "a job well done." (No good ad goes unpunished: after Mr. McCain's spot on CNN came a Mutual of Omaha commercial about retirement plans for the elderly, and another promising to reverse baldness.)Critics worried and commentators warned that the stadium rally would look too grandiose or gaudy. But television forces intimacy on even the largest gatherings. It was only when the cameras pulled back to a wide overhead shot that viewers could fathom the vastness of the crowd. Mostly, they saw Mr. Obama's face and close-ups of his supporters in the audience, especially African-Americans moved to tears by the moment.The prime-time portion of the spectacle was devised to play down race and highlight Mr. Obama's presidential stature: Stevie Wonder sang "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," but a group of retired generals and Susan Eisenhower, a Russian affairs expert who is the granddaughter of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, waxed lyrical about the senator's readiness for the Oval Office.Mr. Obama brought the crowd to its feet many times to cheer and applaud, but perhaps just as importantly for audiences back home, for almost 50 minutes he silenced the ceaseless chatter of television anchors and commentators who had insistently put their own stamp and faces on one of the most exciting political conventions in modern times.People do want to watch: the audience for cable news coverage this week was about double what it was in 2004. Yet despite the huge public fascination, the three major networks limited their coverage to an hour a night, a prime-time patchwork of highlight reels, catchup snippets of live speeches, and commentary.Anchors at conventions used to serve as omniscient narrators; at this convention, they mostly served as human V-chips blocking live speeches with their own palaver and predictions.The broadcast networks long ago ceded gavel-to-gavel coverage to cable and, more recently, to the Internet and news Web sites. Concerned citizens have more ways than ever to follow political events, but it requires ingenuity and patience to cobble together a coherent narrative.And even the 24-hour cable news channels proved unreliable at times, giving too much screen time to their gassiest anchors.Of the three cable news networks, CNN was the least intrusive: Wolf Blitzer and his colleagues were willing to let speakers speak for themselves. When Martin Luther King III spoke on Thursday, so did Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who chose to entertain his viewers with a Doonesbury cartoon about Mr. Obama and the Clintons that also featured Mr. Olbermann and his co-host, Chris Matthews. (Fox News mostly focused on Mr. McCain's possible choice for a running mate, but raced back to the convention when Sheryl Crow took the stage.)It's a bad reading of the audience. For most of the convention, CNN — staid, stable and anchored by fewer egomaniacs — won higher ratings than the other cable news channels, as well as ABC and CBS. And Wednesday, CNN was neck and neck with NBC, and for a while even ahead, suggesting that when a political event is this interesting, television commentators are less so.OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Author: TheKaraokeBandit
Keywords: OBAMA CONVENTION SPEECH DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 2008 CNN Barack Joesph Biden ticket John McCain race political commercial
Added: August 28, 2008
Flickr (photos about mccain affair)
Digg (news relevants about mccain affair)
How did a Libertarian free spirit move from supporting Ron Paul to Barack Obama? And why would she never, ever support John McCain?
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/My_Love_Affair_With_Ron_Paul_And_My_Flirtation_With_Obama
In an election McCain claims is about experience and security, he picks someone who barely has the equivalent of a learner's permit in elected office, let alone foreign affairs. McCain's record is a train wreck for families who want a shot at the American Dream. This choice, his first as a presidential candidate, shows a serious lack of judgment.
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/Anna_Burger_Statement_on_Palin
John McCain's pick of Sarah Palin turns into a conservative flop of colossal proportions. Her speech and delivery were terrible and seeing McCain next to such a young woman served as a painful reminder to all the other young models McCain has had affairs and flings with. A humiliating moment for Republicans, especially conservatives.
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/Palin_Bombs_On_National_Stage
John S. McCain III has set out to become the world standard for hobodom. How did he begin? "First off," as he recounted in his press conference, "I put my affairs in order," my friends, "you know, make sure I was square with the world.
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/President_McHobo
Jimmy Carter said in a recent interview that whether McCain is asked about religion, domestic or foreign affairs, every answer comes back to McCain's 5½ years as a POW. "John McCain was able to weave in his experience in a Vietnam prison camp, no matter what the question was," said Carter.
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/Jimmy_Carter_McCain_is_Milking_His_POW_Record
The MSM has fawned over him on the 2000 Straight Talk Express, cavorted at his backyard barbeques, and helped him cover his affairs and corruption. But the bloom may be coming off the faded, old, wrinkly rose. The new Time article from Jay Carney and Michael Scherer really shows how dramatically the relationship between McCain and the press has ..
http://digg.com/politics/McCain_Proves_Cactus_Is_Not_The_Biggest_Prick_In_The_Desert
The positions that Democrat Barack Obama has taken on Iraq, the Russian-Georgian conflict and other foreign affairs have been confused, Republican presidential candidate John McCain just told the American Legion National Convention in Phoenix during a lunch-time address.
http://digg.com/politics/Obama_invites_trouble_McCain_says
Joseph R. Wood, Cheney's deputy assistant for national security affairs, was in Georgia shortly before the war began. What was he doing there? Was he setting the stage for a war that would help McCain's chances in the upcoming American election?
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/Why_Was_Cheney_s_Aide_in_Georgia_Before_the_War
By Andrew Gray PHOENIX (Reuters) - Republican John McCain on Tuesday questioned rival Barack Obama's belief in American leadership in world affairs with two days to go before the Democratic senator accepts his party's nomination for U.S....
http://digg.com/politics/McCain_hits_Obama_on_confidence_in_America
Remember that woman that McCain was rumored to have had an affair with? She's back in the news. Did the Times miss the real story in their recent reporting on Iseman: McCain leveraging his position as commission chair to help convince Ness to vote in favor of Iseman's client's TV deal?
http://digg.com/2008_us_elections/Did_McCain_Lean_on_FCC_Commissioner_on_Lobbyists_Behalf























