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Muckety This Cindy Hensley Mccain to the Late Don Bolles
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Mccains Campaign for Change is Fueled by Same Old Money Machine
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Mark Salter ‘channels’ John McCain for his biggest speech yet (Muckety)
The prime-time acceptance speech to be delivered tonight by Republican presidential nominee John McCain has been crafted by a man described as the candidate’s best friend, as well as his Boswell.
For two decades, Mark Salter has made channeling McCain’s voice his life’s work. He co-authored five books with the Arizona senator (and split the proceeds 50-50), including the best-selling memoir, Faith of Our Fathers. He has also been McCain’s speechwriter, adviser and closest confidante, surviving countless campaign shake-ups.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

Click to activate the interactive map (requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.“The only person closer to McCain is his wife,” said former senator Warren Rudman, a longtime friend to both men.
From the very start, McCain’s history as a former prisoner of war was part of his political brief. He was first elected to Congress as a war hero beneath the slogan “a name Arizonans are talking about.”
But it was Salter who distilled and refined the narrative.
“Salter has transformed his boss into a character worthy of literature, enlivening his inner conflicts and drawing out his motivations,” wrote Sasha Issenberg of the Boston Globe. “Salter has given the blunt McCain a new voice as a reflective narrator of his own actions – made evident in the “imperfect servant” line, in which our protagonist earns our trust by acknowledging his flaw.”
In Faith of My Fathers, published in 1999 during his first presidential campaign, McCain’s release from prison became a revelatory moment:
“I had remembered a dying man’s legacy to his son,” McCain wrote, “and when I needed it most, I had found my freedom abiding in it.”
That theme – of discovering individual purpose through a “cause greater than self-interest” – became central to McCain’s narrative.
Besides getting McCain better than anyone, Salter has also demonstrated “a one-of-a-kind instinct for how to craft McCain’s public image,” wrote Michael Crowley of the New Republic.
“Over the years, he has taken the raw material of McCain’s biography and temperament and turned it into a compelling narrative that supersedes politics–one about an independent-minded war hero who celebrates courage and humility, demands individual sacrifice, and excoriates vanity.”
A burly, chain-smoker, Salter met McCain for the first time in the mid-1980s and immediately hit it off with him.
He had grown up in Davenport, Iowa, the son of a Korean War veteran, who apparently shared McCain’s gruff modesty. “People write about how McCain is unnecessarily modest,” Salter told Salon in 1999. “But it’s perfectly consistent with the way my father talked about his war experience.”
Salter’s unusual life story also appealed to McCain. After a long rebellious streak working on railroads and singing in a rock band, Salter had gone to night school, ultimately graduating from Georgetown University.
Drawn to politics, he got a job writing speeches for UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, and got to know McCain’s press secretary who invited him to do some freelance work for the senator.
The two men immediately struck up a friendship. Within four years, Salter had been elevated to McCain’s chief of staff. Salter also eventually married McCain’s former scheduler, Diane, with whom he has two daughters.
By all accounts, Salter is fiercely loyal. He once wrestled a critic of the senator to the floor outside his office and held him until the police came.
And last summer, with McCain’s campaign sinking in the polls and running out of money, the senator let go his top managers. The day after the shake-up, he talked to Salter about the future. Salter assured the senator that he was “a McCain guy,” and that he would do whatever the senator wanted, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Now, in a hotly contested election, Salter faces his greatest challenge to date – to sell his candidate as the real agent of change. The speech he reportedly labored over all summer will purportedly spotlight McCain’s moments of self-sacrifice, including his refusal of early release from captivity in Vietnam, and his decision to challenge his own party over campaign-finance reform.
The contrast, he says, will be the “selfishness” of “self-interested” political partisans who, he argues, have risked nothing of substance in their lives.
“Obviously I’ve got to get this one right,” he told the Wall Street Journal.
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Secretive Cerberus keeps a high profile on K Street (Muckety.com)
Cerberus Capital Management, once touted for its daring investments in Chrysler and GMAC, is now struggling to avoid tremendous losses, according to The New York Times.
Yesterday, Chrysler announced that U.S. sales fell by a third last month. In a one-two punch, GMAC said yesterday that its home loan division would dismiss 60 percent of its employees – 5,000 people – in an effort to minimize losses caused by the mortgage crisis.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

Click to activate the interactive map (requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.As the Times notes, company CEO Stephen A. Feinberg, who founded the hedge fund with $10 million in 1992, keeps a low profile.
But in Washington, Cerberus maintains a major presence, paying seven lobbying firms and former U.S. Sen. Jake Garn to represent its interests before Congress.
Former Treasury counsel Arnold I. Havens, now a partner with Jones Walker, represents the firm on banking and transportation issues.
Former U.S. senator and ambassador to Germany Dan Coats, now senior counsel at King & Spalding, represents Cerberus on banking regulation.
Patton Boggs argues for the company on auto emissions legislation. Stanley B. Parrish, former chief of staff to Sen. Orrin Hatch, represents it on auto-related matters.
Cerberus itself has registered as a lobbyist. The company reported spending $2.5 million on lobbying activities last year.
The company has worked against hedge fund regulation and has supported members of Congress who feel the same way. When Sen. Richard Shelby, then chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, criticized hege funds in 2003, Cerberus threw a fundraiser for Shelby’s leadership PAC. Ine a single day, The Hill reported, company executives and colleagues contributed $99,500.
Thus far in 2008, company execs are among the top contributors to Republican congressmen Tom Reynolds, Joe Knollenberg and Fred Upton. They have also given to two Michigan Democrats who hold sway on auto legislation: Sen. Carl Levin and Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick of Detroit.
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Detroit mayor Kwame Kilpatrick admits to felony charges (Muckety.com)
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick has agreed to plead guilty to two felony charges, ending a long, scrappy battle to stay in office.
Kilpatrick agreed to plead guilty to two counts of obstruction of justice, for committing perjury. He will serve four months in jail and five years’ probation, and will pay up to $1 million in restitution.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

Click to activate the interactive map (requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.Kilpatrick and his former chief of staff, Christine Beatty, were indicted in March on charges of perjury, obstruction of justice, misconduct in office and conspiracy. At the time, he had pledged to fight efforts to remove him from office.
An investigation of Kilpatrick’s activities was launched after the Detroit Free Press revealed in January that text messages showed Kilpatrick and Beatty had lied under oath when they denied having an extramarital affair.
The messages also showed that the two provided misleading testimony about firing former Deputy Police Chief Gary Brown after he and former mayoral bodyguard Harold Nelthrope began investigating rumors of a party at the mayoral mansion.
Kilpatrick, elected in 2002 at age 31, was the youngest mayor in Detroit history. He is the son of U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick.
His successor, Ken Cockrel Jr., also comes from a political family. His father, the late Ken Cockrel Sr., was a Detroit city councilman and civil rights activist.
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Secretive Cerberus Keeps a High Profile on K Street
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Mark Salter Channels John Mccain for His Biggest Speech Yet
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Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick Admits to Felony Charges
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Jack Abramoff Sentenced to Four Years in Prison
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