AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

McCain Strain.("Citizen McCain")

National Review

| June 03, 2002 | LOWRY, RICHARD | COPYRIGHT 2002 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Citizen McCain, by Elizabeth Drew (Simon & Schuster, 256 pp., $23)

Whatever else you think of John McCain, he is not an uninteresting political figure -- except, that is, in the hands of Elizabeth Drew in this short hagiography. Drew, of course, is a veteran and much-honored political journalist, but she has produced a book that reads like a long, rejected New Yorker article. She spent months in and out of McCain's office during the 2001 fight over campaign-finance reform and chronicles here the utterly forgettable legislative minutiae, relieved only by periodic gushing pronouncements about McCain's virtue, courage, and kindness to small children and puppies.

By page one, we learn that the country might have collapsed into a pool of quivering goo if it hadn't been for McCain's leadership in the wake of September 11. "During this time," Drew writes, "he defined the situation, rallied the public's morale, and soothed it when it became fearful." Granted, McCain's instincts on the war are nearly flawless and he had some fine Hardball appearances in the weeks after the attacks. I suspect, however, that the fearful nation would have survived even if Citizen McCain hadn't had so many radio and TV bookings. This lack of proportion characterizes most of Drew's judgments in this book, which is why she manages to create a toxic mix -- dullness, without the sobriety.

ThThere are two large themes that are interesting about McCain. One is how the senator's rich personal history -- including being the (in his early career at least) underperforming son and grandson of Navy admirals -- shaped his ambition and his view of politics (this side of McCain is wonderfully captured in his campaign book, Faith of My Fathers). The other is his ideological transformation over the last two years, which has been lamentable from a traditional conservative perspective, but is still an exhilarating object lesson in the power of ideas. It was the logic of his position on a fairly marginal issue, campaign-finance reform, that knocked him from his ideological moorings, and started his inexorable transformation from a reliable conservative vote to the Republican with whom Democrats most like to co-sponsor bills.

These two themes intertwine in the idea of honor. McCain's lodestar as a politician has never been a particular philosophical commitment, but his own patriotic service to country, his honor. Hence, his strong, shamed reaction to getting dragged into the Keating affair and his general distaste for the grubby compromises of partisan politics, both of which have helped make him a campaign-finance reformer. In the 2000 primary campaign, the issue of campaign finance became a powerful symbol of his honor -- of his cussed willingness to go it alone and tell the truth -- and then, accidentally almost, the chrysalis of a broader regulatory agenda.

But to complain that Elizabeth Drew has written a book dealing with none of this is to fall into the reviewer's trap of criticizing an author for writing the wrong book. In fairness to Drew, she doesn't have a flair for the dramatic -- she once wrote a tome called Washington Journal: The Events of 1973-1974 -- so she intended to write the most boring book possible about McCain. Drew should be granted this: She succeeds in chronicling what McCain said at various press conferences about such things as the "rule" in the House determining how proposed amendments to the ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Straight-talk express; Who is Citizen McCain?(OPED)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times June 18, 2002 700+ words
...hmmmm, John McCain? Elizabeth Drew seems transcendently...this same John McCain, were we to...future. So anyway Elizabeth Drew seems to believe...leaders of Mr. McCain's own party...of the book. Elizabeth Drew means to tell...
Elizabeth Drew Discusses White House Staff Changes
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition June 28, 1994 700+ words
...Joining me now is author and journalist Elizabeth Drew [sp], who is completing a book on the Clinton White House. Good morning. ELIZABETH DREW, Author and Journalist: Good morning...you very much. Author and journalist Elizabeth Drew, whose book on the Clinton White House...
Discussion With Author Elizabeth Drew
Transcript from: NPR All Things Considered November 10, 1994 700+ words
...with the new Republican Congress. Elizabeth Drew has written a new book. It's a close...with the old Democratic Congress. ELIZABETH DREW, Author, `On The Edge': In doing...can get anything done. WERTHEIMER: Elizabeth Drew's book On The Edge, The Clinton...
McCain: Medical records will prove fitness for office: Discounts rumors...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times Price, Joyce Howard November 22, 1999 700+ words
...national co-chairman of Mr. McCain's presidential campaign...drive a stake through John McCain's heart . . . Their underlying...Nation," noted that columnist Elizabeth Drew "has identified Trent Lott...colleagues' denials, Mr. McCain said, "Absolutely. I take...
Republican senators ambush McCain.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald Woodlief, Wayne November 28, 1999 700+ words
...heard that the brutal treatment McCain took as a prisoner of war in...Republican cloakroom, where McCain, an often-prickly truth...19 Washington Post column by Elizabeth Drew. Drew, with foresight, had...bones yet did not break. John McCain is not the "Manchurian Candidate...
Rebel of the right: according to the latest memoir from hard-charging John...
Magazine article from: Book Wheelan, Charles November 1, 2002 700+ words
...2002 elections," says McCain, who is in his third term in the Senate. McCain is not due for re-election...voters are seeking a change. Elizabeth Drew, a prizewinning journalist...of the biography Citizen McCain, says McCain is one of...
Stockton, Elizabeth Drew
Reference information from: The Concise Oxford Companion to American Literature James D. Hart January 1, 1986 700+ words
Stockton, Elizabeth Drew [ Barstow ] (1823–1902), collaborated on minor works with her husband Richard Henry Stoddard and wrote The Morgesons...
SOME REPUBLICAN SENATORS TRYING TO UNDERMINE JOHN MCCAIN.(Editorial)(Column)
Newspaper article from: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, WA) November 24, 1999 700+ words
...The better Arizona Sen. John McCain does with the voters, the...author and political analyst Elizabeth Drew not only described what they...it is no secret that many of McCain's fellow Republicans cannot...all, that sort of thing. McCain is too independent to fit that...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, McCain Strain.("Citizen McCain")

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA