The astounding declaration, made in light of McCain’s heated Senate primary battle against talk radio personality, Jack Abramoff buddy and Tea Party favorite J.D. Hayworth, is hidden in a goldmine of an article in this week’s Newsweek by David Margolick, where he argues that McCain’s primary troubles are indicative of an internal identity crisis pitting his political interests against his life-long image, one that those he allowed to get too close cling onto dearly:
Many, many years ago she’d competed in a beauty pageant, Palin declared, as women howled (and a few men growled) approvingly. McCain would surely
win the talent and debate portions of any such contest, she went on, but no way would the Washington elite and “pundints” and “lame-stream media” ever crown him “Miss Congeniality”! “He’s never been a company man, he’s never been one to just ‘go with the flow,’?” she crowed. For there was at least one thing she’d learned in her years of commercial fishing in Alaska: only dead fish do that.
Unfortunately for Palin, Margolick continues, “‘Maverick’ is a mantle McCain no longer claims; in fact, he now denies he ever was one. “I never considered myself a maverick,” he told me. “I consider myself a person who serves the people of Arizona to the best of his abilities.” Yet here was Palin, urging her fans four times in 15 minutes to send McCain the Maverick back to Washington.”
The article is seasoned with its fair share of uncomfortable references to McCain’s war past– “Even a man who can’t applaud quite properly can still form a fist”; “is this evolution simply the latest example, dating back to his days at the Hanoi Hilton, of McCain doing whatever it takes to survive?”– but nonetheless McCain claiming he never adopted a moniker that appeared in countless TV ads raises some serious red flags and probably deserves the harsh
This post has been edited since publication.