US-based Kiwi journalist Bernard Lagan blogs on the final days of the 2008 US presidential election

NEW YORK - Dana Perino, 35 is a diminutive blonde who ten years ago decided her public relations career in California was going nowhere. So she crossed America on a bus and arrived in Washington DC, jobless. These days she speaks for the leader of free world from a podium in the White House that had to be lowered to fit her 155cm frame.
Despite her trajectory to White House spokesman, Perino - understandably - sometimes shows her frustrations. On Saturday she sent out an email advising White House correspondents and that President and Mrs Bush had exercised their right to vote early ahead of next week's Presidential election. After she got numerous emails and calls asking whom the President and First Lady had voted for, Perino, shot out a snippy reply.. The subject header was, "I find this hard to believe." And her email said: "But so many reporters have asked just who the president voted for, I guess I have to make it clear. For months the president has said he supports John McCain for president and of course he voted for him."
Perhaps Perino should not have found the reporters' questions so hard to believe. For John McCain, a Republican like Bush, is doing a marvellous impersonation of a Democrat as he desperately tries to show America that he is no lackey of the deeply unpopular George Bush. Bitten by a flurry of advertisements that contain old sound and pictures of him buttering up to Bush , McCain late last week reinvented himself. Aboard his campaign jet - its logo is The Straight Talk Express - he unleashed his most pointed attack yet upon the President. McCain told a Washington Times reporter: "We just let things get completely out of hand," he said of his own party's rule in the past eight years. He lambasted Bush for building mountains of debt, failing to boost the health system and abusing executive powers. "Those are just some of them," he said with a laugh, chomping into a peanut butter sandwich.
His remarks can been seen as a measure of just how much damage Democrat ads running on national television showing McCain's earlier effusive praise for Bush are doing. In one ad McCain is shown boasting that he has supported Bush 90 per cent of the time.
It all made for a very uncomfortable appearance for McCain yesterday on the Meet the Press program which played footage of McCain saying in 2005: "And on the transcendent issues, the most important issues of our day, I have been totally in agreement and support of President Bush."
Looking flustered, McCain yesterday told the program's host: "I know how it is on this show. You show various segments and comments that we make thousands of. And I understand it. But the fact is that I am not George Bush."
He now has only a week to prove it.
What is quite scary about US presidential elections is how fickle the American electorate can be. Voting seems to be dependent on the last 30 second electioneering TV sound-bite one has just seen before going to the polling station. It was only four years ago that the whole world was in shock at the re-election of Bush. Remember Mike Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, the incompetent Bush invading Iraq, the non-existant WMD's, TV pictures of Iraq mothers weeping over their child's breathless limbless body? The world was thinking how could this incompetent idiot be re-elected? Surely the American people are intelligent enough to see through all the hype? Will we be proven wrong again?
+1
McCain's smear campaign is worse then what Clark has run against Key. What's scariest about this is that Americans are still backing him even though he has no solid plans to save the economy, no real likability, and a 6% chance that his VP will have to take over in the event of anything happening to him. What's worse is that both Australian and New Zealand service men, our brothers, sisters, uncles, aunties, and cousins are out there right now caught up in a war we never wanted to support. God save all of us if McCain 'the war vet' gets into power.
As the saying goes " A leopard never changes its spots " and neither will McCains denial that in fact he has agreed with Bush's policies 90% of the time, so its a bit late to say that he disagrees with Bush, the horse has already bolted and the gate is already shut.
You need Javascript enabled in your web browser to post a comment.
Harlem voters say Obama speaks to their hearts
10:04AM Wednesday November 5, 2008
Blog: America on the edge of transformation
10:00AM Wednesday November 5, 2008
Can a black newcomer thrash a Washington veteran?
7:45AM Tuesday November 4, 2008
Obama's aunt joins ugly history of 'October surprise'
10:47AM Monday November 3, 2008
8:18AM Friday October 31, 2008
Ad makes McCain bumbling old white guy
10:49AM Thursday October 30, 2008
Obama threat downplayed - for his own good
12:06PM Wednesday October 29, 2008
Money buys anything in America
11:47AM Tuesday October 28, 2008
Not so odd to ask if Bush voted for McCain
11:45AM Monday October 27, 2008
Sarah Palin - the Jenny Shipley of US politics?
12:31PM Sunday October 26, 2008
People lie about sex - not politics
9:26AM Saturday October 25, 2008