Tag: 2008 John McCain presidential campaign

  • Sarah Palin withholds medical records

    With less than 24 hours to go before the presidential election, Sarah Palin still has not released her medical records despite her campaign’s earlier pledges to do so.

    Two weeks ago, Palin’s campaign told several reporters that a summary of the governor’s medical history would be made public before Nov. 4.

    Reporters were told that details of Palin’s medical background would be released early last week. Last Thursday, however, a campaign aide backed off that pledge, saying he wasn’t sure when the information would be released.

    John McCain, Barack Obama and Joseph Biden have all provided details about their medical history.

    The campaign’s stonewalling has spurred indignation in the blogosphere.

    “It would be nice if the media highlighted these omissions in the next 24 hours and held Palin accountable for agreeing to release her medical records, not releasing them and not having a press conference,” wrote Huffington Post blogger Karen Russell.

    Atlantic’s Andrew Sullivan takes a more conspiratorial perspective.

    “Why does Sarah Palin refuse to prove that her baby – the baby that has been a campaign prop for two months – is actually one she gave birth to?” he wrote Friday.

    Update: Palin’s campaign released a summary of her medical history late Monday night. According to an Associated Press story filed at 10:59 p.m., Palin’s doctor in Alaska says she’s in excellent health with no known health issues that would interfere with her ability to function as vice president if she and Republican John McCain are elected Tuesday.

    Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


     Read related stories: Politics  

    2 Comments

    • #1.   Carmelfog 11.03.2008

      The nomination of Sarah Palin has signifcantly increased the divide in he Republican party and has pushed many of us to the other side. Rather sad but true. I suspect many Republican politicans themselves will not be voting McCain/Palin.

    • #2.   PuLeez 11.04.2008

      Investigative journalist and former NSA agent Wayne Madsen reported on Sept. 21 that several people who know Palin say Trig is not her baby, but her daughter Bristol’s. http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/articles/20080921

      Search YouTube: Palin pregnancy won’t interfere with duties.
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkYT0HFAxXw
      Look at her face during this conference. She is not happy. She appears to be 1) lying; 2) very stressed. Note her staff member’s reaction to the news.

      See this video of Palin & host walking vigorously to the AK Capitol bldg. when she was supposedly 6 months pregnant. She ‘likes her guts thrashed’ by running on Juneau’s hilly streets. Not typical pregnant-mom language.
      http://alaskapodshow.com/index.php/2008/02/20/my-visit-to-juneau-alaska/

      Strange Facts: A staunchly religious, pro-life Republican governor hides her fifth pregnancy until the seventh month. Her doctor reveals today that Palin knew Trig was Down Syndrome ‘early in the second trimester’. Palin, age 44, with a history of gaining lots of weight, has no pregnancy symptoms whatsoever until after the press conference March 5, 2008. Trig is born 5 weeks premature on April 18, just hours after Palin flies home from a governor’s convention in Dallas, TX supposedly with a leaking bag of waters.

    Leave a Comment


    The relationship map to the left is interactive.
    • Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations.
    • Expand items with + signs by double-clicking or by selecting multiple items in the map and pressing the “e” key.
    • Move an item in the map by clicking and dragging.
    • You can also delete items, separate boxes and save maps. Right-click on the map or select Map Tools for these options.
    • Find out more about an item in the map by right-clicking on the item and choosing Information about…
    • View map color key.
    • This interactive map requires Flash player.


    • Domino’s CEO named U-M athletic director

      January 6, 2010 at 8:29am

      The University of Michigan Tuesday named David A. Brandon, the CEO of Domino’s Pizza, as the school’s new athletic director.

    • Watch Joe Lieberman pivot

      The one thing you can say about Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman is that he’s a survivor.

      The lawmaker who morphed from Democrat to independent to Republican stumper, all quicker than you can say, “What’s in it for me,” appears to be crafting yet a new political persona in the event of a Barack Obama victory.

      Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

      Click to activate this MucketyMap

      Click to activate 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.

      In a conference call with Connecticut reporters Friday, Lieberman stressed that his comments about the Illinois senator have always been “within bounds.”

      “When I go out, I say, ‘I have a lot of respect for Sen. Obama. He’s bright. He’s eloquent.’ Someday, I might even support him for president,” Lieberman said. “But now in the midst of this series of crises, John McCain is simply so much better prepared that that’s who I am proud to support.”

      Lieberman also said that if McCain doesn’t win, “I’m going to do everything I can to be bringing people … together across party lines to support the new president so he can succeed.”

      Not to be nitpicky, but it was only about two months ago that the Connecticut senator was asserting the Democratic nominee did not “put the country first.” Speaking at the Republican National Convention, he went so far as to say that Obama “was voting to cut off funding for our troops on the ground.”

      Which is why most political analysts have assumed that it would be payback big time for Lieberman, should the Democrats win a decisive Senate majority. The prevailing theory is, the Democratic leadership would strip him of his chairmanship of the Homeland Security Committee, and the exiled senator would throw in with the Republicans.

      But Ken Dautrich at the University of Connecticut makes a case that it is premature to write Lieberman’s political obituary.

      In a Hartford Courant op-ed column last week, Dautrich points out that Lieberman’s vote could be the difference between a filibuster-proof majority for the Democrats:

      Just as luck would have it that Lieberman represented the one vote distinguishing a Democrat majority from a Republican majority after the 2006 elections, it now appears that his vote just may define a filibuster-proof Democrat majority after the 2008 Senate elections.

      The one missing link in the Democrats’ likely White House and congressional victories in 2008 is the possibility that the Senate may filibuster the Obama-Democratic congressional legislation. From the looks of it, Obama will win on Nov. 4, and the Democrats will maintain their majorities in Congress. But a filibuster-proof Senate requires 60 Democrats…

      It now seems quite possible that the 2008 Senate races will result in 59 Democrats, 40 Republicans and Lieberman. If that happens and Lieberman chooses to remain with the Democrats, that would provide a filibuster-proof majority. On the other hand, if Lieberman aligns with the Republicans, a filibuster could prevent significant Obama-Democratic legislation…

      Of course, everything hinges on the numbers. But be on the lookout for more pivots if need be from Lieberman – and the Democratic leadership.

      Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


       Read related stories: Lobbying · Politics · Recent Stories  

      0 Comments

      • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

      Leave a Comment


      • Investor Ron Baron on shifting sands

        October 31, 2008 at 11:18am

        Last year, investor Ron Baron paid $103 million for a 40-acre oceanfront estate in East Hampton. Now the view in the Hamptons is changing, in more ways than one.

      • McCain adviser Nancy Pfotenhauer learned ropes as lobbyist, crusader

        Her short, blonde hair is perfectly coiffed; she smiles beatifically through Chris Matthews’ tirades and wields John McCain’s latest talking points like a sword in battle.

        Nancy Miller Pfotenhauer, senior adviser to GOP presidential nominee John McCain, has prepared for this role for 20 years.

        Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

        Click to activate this MucketyMap

        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.

        She honed her skills as a conservative poster-girl by working her way up through the trenches of GOP politics, conservative think tanks and private industry – apprenticing herself as a young, graduate student to conservative economic star Walter E. Williams at George Mason University, working for the Republican National Committee, and then learning political hardball as in-house lobbyist for Koch Industries, the world’s largest private company run by conservative mogul Charles G. Koch.

        Some have suggested that the McCain campaign has put her out front to make the Republican ticket seem more female-friendly – a strategy that may also be reflected in the White House’s choice of Dana Perino as spokeswoman.

        Pfotenhauer, however, is no Sally-come-lately to the GOP; her connections to the politically active Koch brothers, in particular, go back two decades.

        After graduating from the University of Georgia, she got a masters degree in economics at George Mason University, a major beneficiary of Koch family largesse. (No coincidence that Richard H. Fink, executive vice president of Koch Industries, is a member of the board of visitors of George Mason, and also president and director of two of the family’s charities – the Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation and of the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation.)

        One of her mentors at George Mason was Williams – a darling of the conservative movement who appears as a substitute host on “The Rush Limbaugh Show,” and sits on boards of Koch-funded think tanks such as the Cato Institute.

        She got her first job in Washington as a senior economist at the Republican National Committee in 1987, and was promoted to chief economist in 1988.

        Leveraging her association with Williams, at age 24, she won a spot on the transition team for then-incoming President George H.W. Bush, according to a story in Daily Kos, where she advised on appointments to both the Federal Trade Commission and the Interstate Commerce Commission.

        For the next two years, she worked as economic counsel to then-Sen. William Armstrong, a member of the Republican leadership who served on both the Finance and Budget Committees. In 1990, she was appointed chief economist of the President’s Council on Competitiveness, where she worked with Dan Quayle, among others.

        Soon thereafter, she moved to the Washington office of Koch industries, becoming the company’s chief in-house lobbyist.

        “At Koch, Pfotenhauer experienced first-hand the legislative and regulatory labyrinth that faces American companies and ultimately has an impact on consumers,” according to her own profile.

        Gas pipelines were a major issue during her tenure there. In early 2000, Koch Industries agreed to a landmark $30 million civil settlement with the federal government, in an effort to resolve claims related to more than 300 oil spills from its pipelines and oil facilities in six states.

        \n

        In 2001, Pfotenhauer left Koch Industries to become president of the Independent Women’s Forum, a conservative research group that also received funding from Koch foundations.

        \n

        Founded by Rosalie (Ricky) Gaull Silberman in 1992, the women’s forum grew out of “Women for Judge Thomas,” which was created to defend Clarence Thomas against allegations of sexual harassment and other improprieties during his confirmation hearings for the U.S. Supreme Court.

        \n

        The group has been described as “a virtual Who’s Who of Washington’s Republican establishment” – besides Silberman, its directors emerita include Wendy Lee Gramm, Lynne Cheney and Midge Decter.

        \n

        Its stated goals are to build support for “a greater respect for limited government, equality under the law, property rights, free markets, strong families, and a powerful and effective national defense and foreign policy,” according to its website.

        \n

        The liberal-leaning People for the American Way, which is critical of the organization, describes it as “a secular counterpart to Religious Right women’s groups like Eagle Forum and Concerned Women for America….”

        \n

        It was through the women’s forum that Photenhauer was appointed by then-Attorney General John Ashcroft to join the National Advisory Committee on Violence Against Women in 2002 – though her group had vigorously opposed the law the committee was supposed to oversee.

        \n

        The appointments infuriated feminist groups, according to a Washington Post column by Dana Milbank:

        \n

        “I’m appalled but I’m not shocked,” said Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women. She said the IWF “makes light of violence against women on a regular basis.”

        \n

        Pfotenhauer said in an interview yesterday that her purpose was “not at all” to undo the law but to give states more flexibility in implementing it.

        \n

        “You have to look at domestic violence as a culture of intimacy,” she said, rather than a “one-size-fits-all, men-beat-up-women” framework.

        \n

        Pfotenhauer said it was the first time her organization has been invited to join the committee. “I’d hope we’ve been asked to participate in this because we have a different view but one that’s constructive,” she said.

        \n

        In October 2003, the women’s forum announced an affiliation with Citizens for a Sound Economy, now Americans For Prosperity – also Koch-funded groups – with which it shared staff and premises for several years. For a while Pfotenhauer was also president of Americans for Prosperity and executive vice president for Citizens for a Sound Economy.

        \n

        Pfotenhauer left those groups last year to become an adviser to John McCain’s presidential campaign.

        \n

        She is married to Kurt Pfotenhauer, a former top lobbyist for the Mortgage Bankers Association who now heads the American Land Title Association.

        Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


      • Rudy Giuliani puts together team to ‘guide’ firms on proposed bailout

        The vultures are already circling.

        The New York Daily News reports today that Rudy Giuliani is positioning his international law firm to get a stake in the proposed $700-billion bailout of Wall Street.

        Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

        With a rescue deal still being hammered out in Washington, the former presidential candidate and New York mayor announced Thursday that Bracewell & Giuliani had put together a high-powered task force to assist financial institutions in selling toxic assets to the federal government.

        “Our team of former government officials and experienced attorneys in the fields of legislation, enforcement and finance are equipped to guide institutions in this quickly evolving and complex environment,” Giuliani said in a press release.

        Giuliani is not the only one preparing his firm to advise companies on the bailout. But he has been a high-profile surrogate for GOP presidential nominee John McCain. The fact that McCain has not signed off on the proposed bailout does not seem to have given the former mayor any pause before pursuing a new business opportunity.

        Members of Bracewell & Giuliani’s task force will include several partners with connections both to the financial world, the U.S. Treasury Department and to the George W. Bush White House, among them:

        • Robert L. Clarke, a former U.S. Comptroller of the Currency under the late Ronald Reagan, who also was a director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Resolution Trust Corporation.
        • Marc Mukasey, a former federal prosecutor in Manhattan and the son of U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey, a close friend of Giuliani’s.
        • John A. Brunjes, a member of the Connecticut Hedge Fund Association and a former assistant attorney general for the state of Connecticut.
        • Patrick C. Oxford, a longtime fundraiser for George W. Bush, who had served as a member of the board of regents for the University of Texas during Bush’s tenure as Texas governor.
        • Evan D. Flaschen, a leading bankruptcy attorney who has represented some of the world’s largest institutional investors.

        Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter

      • Silver State bank fails; John McCain’s son had been director

        It looks like Andrew McCain got out just in the nick of time.

        McCain 46, the son of GOP presidential nominee John McCain, resigned as a director of troubled Silver State Bank and its parent company, Silver State Bancorp, on July 26, citing “personal reasons” – just five weeks before regulators shut down the federally-insured bank.

        Regulators announced Friday that they had seized the Nevada bank and sold it, blaming its failure on soured loans in commercial real estate and land development, mainly in Los Vegas.

        Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

        Click to activate this MucketyMap

        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.

        Andrew McCain had served on the company’s three-person auditing committee since joining the board in February, 2008, but there is no indication he committed any wrongdoing, or that his father had any knowledge or involvement in the bank’s difficulties

        Still, his involvement in a failed bank is politically awkward for his father’s campaign since it conjures memories of John McCain’s role in the 1980s savings and loan scandals when he was accused of improperly aiding Charles H. Keating, Jr., chairman of the failed Lincoln Savings and Loan Association.

        After a lengthy investigation, the Senate Ethics Committee cleared John McCain of impropriety, but chastised him for exercising poor judgment in helping Keating. Three other senators – Alan Cranston, Dennis DeConcini, and Donald Riegle – were found to have improperly interfered with a federal investigation.

        In Andrew McCain’s case, he had been appointed to the boards of Silver State and its holding company in February, and resigned five months later. Silver State issued a July 26 press release announcing his immediate resignation for “personal reasons.”

        Only a week afterward, the company announced a $62.7 million net loss for the second quarter of the year – along with the resignations of its CEO and chairman, Corey Johnson and Bryan Norby, both of whom had co-founded the bank in 1996.

        The bank said in a subsequent regulatory filing that its second-quarter net loss was actually more than $10 million higher than what it had originally announced. It also said in the filing that its worsening financial condition meant there is “uncertainty about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”

        The holding company has 13 bank branches in Southern Nevada and four around Phoenix.

        Silver State had $1.7 billion in deposits, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Nevada State Bank is taking over the deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., leaving $20 million in uninsured deposits, which may not be wholly recovered. Silver State became the 11th federally insured bank to fail in 2008.

        A Wall Street Journal story looking into Andrew McCain’s sudden exit suggested he had resigned at the urging of those who felt his position on the board could become a liability in his father’s presidential bid. The younger McCain, who is CFO of Phoenix-based Hensley & Co., the distributorship owned by his stepmother Cindy McCain, had also recently agreed to lead the Greater Phoenix Chamber of Commerce, and had concerns about balancing his responsibilities, according to the Journal .

        In any case, he was not the first to leave the beleaguered bank.

        Douglas French, then the executive vice president of commercial real estate lending, had resigned in May, also citing personal reasons. French is an associate editor of the conservative Liberty Watch magazine, which counts Bill O’Reilly and John Stossel among its contributing writers.

        The younger McCain, who is one of two sons from his father’s first marriage, had previously served as a director of Choice Bank in Scottsdale, Arizona, from 2006 to April 1, 2008, when it was acquired by Silver State Bancorp

        Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter



      • Big donor Robert Wood Johnson gets royal reception from GOP

        Robert Wood Johnson IV, known as “Woody,” got star treatment at the just-ended Republican convention in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

        There was no mistaking what that was all about.

        Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

        Click to activate this MucketyMap

        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.

        Johnson, the owner of the New York Jets and heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune, has raised millions for John McCain’s presidential campaign.

        As Michael Luo of the New York Times described in a story today, Johnson shared a skybox at the Xcel Energy Center with Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager. He was the only fund-raiser with his name emblazoned on his own hospitality suite, the “Woody Johnson Minneapolis-St. Paul 2008 Host Committee Private Lounge.”

        And Luo describes how on Tuesday evening, before the convention really got going, Johnson was among a cluster of McCain campaign officials and supporters hovering outside a suite guarded by an aide.

        As Carly Fiorina, the former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard and senior McCain adviser, chatted in one small circle, Mr. Johnson, 61, was at the center of another next to her, before he disappeared inside the suite with Mr. Davis.

        Johnson told Luo that he only takes on candidates and causes he really believes in.

        Earlier this year, for instance, he made as many as 50 calls a day, organizing a New York City fund-raiser for McCain that brought in $7 million in a single evening. He did that in part by importuning some of his billionaire buddies, among them real-estate mogul Donald Trump and David Koch, co-owner of Koch Industries.

        Like many of McCain’s biggest supporters, Johnson has long been a player in Republican politics. He was a Bush Ranger in 2000 and 2004, raising more than $200,000 in each election, according to the Times.

        By all accounts, he has used his influence to advance his philanthropic, as much as business interests, pushing for more federal funding for research, for instance, for juvenile diabetes and lupus, which afflict two of his daughters, for instance. But there’s also little doubt his access has helped him as the owner of the Jets and his search for a new stadium for the team.

        Still Johnson played down the significance of his access to McCain.

        “You can call the senator too,” he told Luo.

        Related story: McCain’s campaign for change is fueled by same old money machine