June 19, 2005 - Meet the Press
MR. RUSSERT:
Another issue confronting this administration: tobacco. The Justice Department head said
in its legal proceedings that it would take $130 billion over 25 years to educate the
American people about how to stop smoking. And then, suddenly, there was an offer made
that they would settle for $10 billion. Janet Reno, the former attorney general, said that
politics has crept into this decision. What do you say?
SEN. McCAIN: I
say, one, I don't know enough about it. And, two, if you make that accusation, you should
have some kind of proof. Would I have liked to have seen that number higher? I think so.
But I don't know enough about the legal aspects of it to make a valid comment on that. But
I'd like to see more. We've had--I had a bill on the issue of tobacco years ago that
failed in the Senate. And then following that was this tobacco agreement, which has been
largely a failure because the states have not used those moneys to support antismoking and
anti-tobacco programs in most cases.
MR. RUSSERT:
But the professional staff at Justice wanted to go for the $130 billion.
SEN. McCAIN:
But, again, I...
MR. RUSSERT:
Should the attorney general back them up and instruct his attorney to go for the $130
billion?
SEN. McCAIN: I
think the attorney general probably, given the controversy, should explain why the
decision was made that was made.
Full Transcript for June 19
Guest: Sen. John McCain,
R-AZ
NBC News
Updated: 11:20 a.m. ET June
19, 2005
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NBC News MEET THE PRESS
Sunday, June 19, 2005
Guest: Senator John
McCain, (D-Ariz.)
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and serves on the Armed Services, and
Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committees.
Moderator: Tim Russert,
NBC News
TIM RUSSERT: Our issues
this Sunday morning: Iraq, Afghanistan, the prison at Guantanamo, stem cell research,
immigration, the Supreme Court, presidential politics, and more. With us, in an exclusive
interview, for the full hour, a man who ran for president in 2000, and just might try
again in 2008, the senior Republican senator from Arizona, John McCain.
Senator McCain, welcome
back. Let's go right to it.
SEN. JOHN McCAIN,
(R-AZ): Thank you, Tim. And, first, happy Father's Day.
MR. RUSSERT: And to you...
SEN. McCAIN: Thank you.
MR. RUSSERT: ...a great
day, a great day.
SEN. McCAIN: Thank you.
MR. RUSSERT: Sixty
percent--6-0--of Americans say that things are going badly in Iraq. Are they right?
SEN. McCAIN: No, I
don't think they're exactly right. I certainly understand their frustration, and, of
course, too often we've been told that--the American people have been told that we're at a
turning point, whether it be the capture of Saddam Hussein, or Uday and Qusay, or the
elections, what the American people should have been told, and should be told, and I
believe the president is going to tell them, I think he's focusing back on Iraq, I think
it's long, it's hard, it's tough. It's very tough.
And the consequences of
failure are profound. And the benefits of success are incredible. And some of those
benefits, such as stirrings towards democracy in the Middle East, and, perhaps, even
Libya, taking down their weapons of mass destruction, and other things, are a result of
our operations in Iraq. But it's tough, and it's hard. It's a hard slog, Tim. And we've
made serious mistakes. And we're paying a price for those mistakes. And I would hasten to
add in every conflict we make mistakes. The key is to fix it.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator
Joe Biden just came back, and wrote this letter to you and your other colleagues in the
Senate: "I recently returned from my fifth trip to Iraq. ... What I saw and heard
there from our own people with regard to the insurgency, the training of Iraqi security
forces, the political transition, and the reconstruction efforts stands in stark contrast
to some of the assessments coming from the Administration here in Washington."
And one specific,
Senator McCain, was this comment by Vice President Cheney, "I think the level of
activity that we see today, from a military standpoint, I think will clearly decline. I
think they're in the last throes, if you will, of the insurgency." Do you believe the
insurgency is in its last throes?
SEN. McCAIN: No, but I
do believe that there are some signs, which can be viewed as hopeful. More and more of the
activities we're seeing are coming from foreign people, Saudis and others, who have come
into the country. There is a better training and equipping program of the Iraqi military.
We've got one of our best generals, General Petreus, doing that. There is now an
agreement--we have to bring the Sunnis into this constitution-forming convention, and
that's important. People were frustrated by the delay after the elections to the formation
of a government. But, overall, I think there are some hopeful signs. But what I think we
should do, Tim, is wait until we achieve the successes, then celebrate them, rather than
predict them. Because too often that prediction has not proven to be true. And that kind
of--that's what affects, I think, American public opinion.
I don't think Americans
believe that we should cut and run out of Iraq by any stretch of the imagination. But I
think they also would like to be told, in reality, what's going on and, by the way, I
think part of that is it's going to be, at least, a couple more years.
MR. RUSSERT: A couple
more years.
SEN. McCAIN: At least.
MR. RUSSERT: There
seems to be a disconnect at several levels. The administration saying that the Iraqi
security forces now number 169,000. Joe Biden, on this program, last week, said that he
found that there are three battalions, 5,000 Iraqis, who could stand and fight without
American support. Our only exit strategy is to have enough Iraqis who are willing to
defend their country, spill their own blood, so that we can withdraw. How many security
forces do you believe the Iraqis have right now that are fully capable of fighting and
defending their nation?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
know the answer. I know the number is increasing. At first it was-- one of the mistakes
was training them too quickly. They were not prepared in places like Mosul. They cut and
ran. There have been some areas, such as Fallujah, where they performed better. They are
getting better, and the training is getting better. The key to this is not how many
troops, it's how many units. You know, we grade our military by unit capability. It
doesn't mean that every person in that unit is fully capable. But the unit is capable. And
that's what we're trying to make a transition to grading their units. Are there as many as
we want? No. Are there less than, perhaps, some have been led to believe? Yes. But I
believe that there has been some improvement, and that improvement gives us, at least,
some hope. Because, as you say, and everybody knows, the exit strategy from Iraq is not a
time or a date. The exit strategy from Iraq is clearly the Iraqis being able to take over
the responsibilities and the casualties, for policing and ensuring security in their own
country.
Look, nobody cares--in
fact, I'm kind of glad that American troops are in South Korea. Why? Because there's no
Americans in combat. So it's not a matter of time and date of withdraw. It's a matter of
Iraqis being able to assume the responsibilities for the security of their own nation.
And, again, I think we should tell people it's not going to be a short--I'd rather say two
or three years, and be surprised a year from now, than say, "Everything's fine,"
and then be disappointed a year or two from now.
MR. RUSSERT: We also
see in Afghanistan it looks as if the insurgency is finding new life, killing Americans
and Afghanis and trying to disrupt their September election.
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah, but
we've made tremendous progress in--there. These provincial reconstruction teams, NATO is
there. We've got troops from all over the world, New Zealand and others, who are there.
Karzai has expanded and expanded his areas of strength. Their economy is starting to
return. There is an overwhelming approval of Karzai and his government. So, yeah, they're
going to have tough times. That area, as we all know, on the Pakistani-Afghan border has
never been controlled since the days of Alexander the Great. It has never been controlled.
But--and I think with the weather improvement, it's kind of predictable.
One of the areas that
is of great concern, as you know, is the continued growing of poppies. And we've got to
address that. The poppy production is less than it was last year. That's the good news.
The bad news is last year it was an all-time high. So I would argue that perhaps the issue
of opium and heroin and the poppy production is probably as great a threat to Afghanistan
as anything else.
MR. RUSSERT: We have
considerable commitments in Afghanistan and Iraq, deployments. These were the headlines
that greeted Americans just last week. "Just over 5,000 new recruits entered Army
boot camp in May. ... Early last month, the Army ... lowered its long-stated May goal to
6,700 recruits from 8,050. Compared with the original target, the Army achieved only 62.6
percent of its goal for the month [a shortfall of almost 40 percent]." What will
happen if for the next year the recruitment for the volunteer Army falls 40 percent short
of the goal?
SEN. McCAIN: We're in
trouble. We have to understand that we need to do a couple of things. One of them is to
increase the incentives for people to join the military. To some degree, this is a
marketplace for a pool of young Americans, men and women. So it's very important we do
that. We should consider a shorter term enlistment for some 18 months active duty, 18
months Reserve duty in return for $18,000 in educational benefits. But I think we also
have to talk a lot more--a lot more--about patriotism, about national service, about the
challenges that America faces throughout the world and maybe try to re-ignite some of the
patriotism that America felt after September 11.
There's still the
threat of terrorism, the war on terrorism out there. We need to win this conflict. We need
the best of America in our military. So I think we ought to understand it's a marketplace.
Increase whatever it takes to attract young men and women into the military. At the same
time, talk about the need to serve and the need for all Americans to serve and provide
Americans the capability to do so.
MR. RUSSERT: But,
Senator, if we don't reach our recruitment goal, we will not be able to achieve the
deployments we have in Iraq and Afghanistan.
SEN. McCAIN: I agree. I
totally agree with you. But we can fix it. Back in the '70s--this is not a totally good
comparison--the airlines were hiring all of our military pilots. So what did we do? We
raised the pay and benefits and bonuses for re-enlistment. We need to raise our incentives
for young men and women to serve in the military, appeal to their patriotism but make sure
that it's a very rewarding enterprise in other ways as well.
MR. RUSSERT: Do you see
a return of the draft?
SEN. McCAIN: No.
MR. RUSSERT: Never?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't.
No. First of all, the draft didn't work in its previous form, but second of all, I think
by far the best way to go is provide ways for AmeriCorp, Peace Corps, community service,
neighborhood--and give all Ameri--the biggest mistake I think we made after September 11
was not calling on Americans to serve. We shouldn't have just told them to go shopping or
take a trip. We should have said, "OK. We're setting up all these organizations.
We're expanding existing organizations and we're going to give you all a chance to fight
as foot soldiers in the war on terror." I think we can still do that.
MR. RUSSERT: Bottom
line: What should President Bush say to the country about Iraq right now
SEN. McCAIN: "It's
going to be a long, hard slog. And I'm asking for your patience. And the consequences of
failure are catastrophic. The benefits of success, we're already seeing in some parts of
the Middle East. And we have had some success. We're now in the process of a constitution
in Iraq. We have had an election that Iraqis proved, contrary to some cynics' view, that
Iraqis were willing to even risk their lives in order to vote. We're forming a
constitution. We will stick to the guidelines of: August 15, the constitution; October 15,
ratification of it; and December 15, an election of an Iraqi government. We will stay the
course and we will do whatever is necessary in order to succeed."
And that means
addressing issues such as Syria, where a lot of foreign troops are coming in. If a Syria
will not enforce its borders, the United States may not be required to respect Syria's
borders.
MR. RUSSERT: What does
that mean?
SEN. McCAIN: It means
that the Syrians are serving as a conduit for a lot of foreign people coming into Iraq.
And the bulk of the suicide bombers, for example, are not Iraqi citizens. And we have to
put additional pressures on Syria. Syria, by the way, is not only playing in Iraq, as you
know. They're still playing in Lebanon in a very, very--in a way that could be very
damaging to the formation of a government in Lebanon.
MR. RUSSERT: Might that
mean military action against Syria?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
think military action, but I think there's a variety of ways to put pressure on Syria.
MR. RUSSERT: Such as?
SEN. McCAIN: Such as,
first of all, I'd go to the international organizations and try to get some kind of
sanctions and condemnation of it. Second of all, I think that we should let the Syrians
know that if there is continued passage of people, we may have to do what's necessary in
order to prevent that.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me
turn to Guantanamo. In October--excuse me, December of 2003, "Sen. John McCain said
he is concerned about the failure to move ahead with prisoners' trials at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba. ...`These cases have to be disposed of one way or another. After keeping someone two
years, a decision should be made.'" That was a year and a half ago. It's now been
three and a half years. Should we close it?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
think necessarily. But I think the important thing is it's not the facility of Guantanamo,
it's the adjudication of the cases of the prisoners who have been held there without trial
or without any adjudication of their cases. So the frustration is not the fact we have a
facility at Guantanamo, although that certainly becomes symbolic. The frustration is: What
are we going to do with these people?
Now, I know that some
of these guys are terrible, terrible killers and the worst kind of scum of humanity. But,
one, they deserve to have some adjudication of their cases. And there's a fear that if you
release them that they'll go back and fight again against us. And that may have already
happened. But balance that against what it's doing to our reputation throughout the world
and whether it's enhancing recruiting for people to join al-Qaeda and other organizations
and want to do bad things to the United States of America. I think, on balance, the
argument has got to be--the weight of evidence has got to be that we've got to adjudicate
these people's cases, and that means that if it means releasing some of them, you'll have
to release them. Look, even Adolf Eichmann got a trial. I mean, there--we are signatories
to numerous agreements on human rights, against torture, universal declaration on human
rights, etc. So that means we have to do something with these people. And I hope we can
move that process forward very soon.
MR. RUSSERT: Ross
Perot, who's been deeply involved in the prisoner-of-war issue, and you were a prisoner of
war, said this the other day: "If, in fact, we are doing things that are improper,
that will give our enemy the incentive to be more brutal to any POWs they have from our
military." Do you agree with that?
SEN. McCAIN: Yes, I do.
I think that we will not have as high a moral ground the next time we are in a conflict
and Americans become--American servicemen and women should fall prey-prisoner--become
prisoners of war. And it worries me and it keeps me awake at night. It really does.
MR. RUSSERT: Your
Democratic colleague Dick Durbin of Illinois set off a firestorm when he compared the
actions of Americans at Guantanamo to Nazis, Soviet Gulags and Pol Pot. Former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich said that Senator Durbin should be censured by the Senate for those
comments.
SEN. McCAIN: Well, I
think that Senator Durbin owes not only the Senate an apologyI don't know if censure
would be in order--but an apology because it does a great disservice to men and women who
suffered in the gulag and in Pol Pot's killing fields. Dick Durbin should be required to
read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's "Gulag Archipelago" and I think that he would--may
have a better understanding that there's no comparison whatsoever. And it does a great
disservice to the majority of men and women who are serving in Guantanamo who are doing
the job that they're told to do and they're doing it in a humane fashion. To tar the
American servicemen and women with a brush that applies to the gulag or the killing fields
is a great disservice to the men and women in the military who are serving honorably down
there.
MR. RUSSERT: Should he
formally apologize?
SEN. McCAIN: Well, I
don't know what a formal--but he should certainly apologize.
MR. RUSSERT: Will the
Senate take any action against him?
SEN. McCAIN: I predict
to you that by the time this program is shown next Sunday that Mr. Durbin will have
apologized.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me
turn to some domestic issues as well. Terri Schiavo, an issue that energized Congress. The
president flew back from vacation to be involved in that particular case. There's now been
an autopsy which indicates her brain weighs half of what was expected in a human being and
she was blind. The majority leader of the Senate, Bill Frist, went on the Senate
floor, second time in 12 hours to argue that Florida doctors had erred in saying Terri
Schiavo is in a persistent vegetative state. "`I question it based on a review of the
video footage which I spent an hour or so looking in my office,' he said in a lengthy
speech in which he quoted medical texts and standards. `She certainly seems to respond to
visual stimuli.'" Was that appropriate?
SEN. McCAIN: I didn't
see it in the context, Tim, and I don't want to criticize Bill Frist. He obviously had
very sincere feeling feelings about this issue. All of us were very emotional. We-Terri
Schiavo had a loving parents and siblings that wanted to care for her for the rest of her
life. I think our hearts went out to her in that situation and her family. Maybe we didn't
use our brains as well as we should have. So I can't--I know that Bill Frist has denied
that he "diagnosed" Terri Schiavo. I think we ought to get this issue behind us
and move forward. It's an American tragedy and I hope that the next time we're presented
with one of these situations we'll perhaps approach it in a more measured and reasoned
fashion.
MR. RUSSERT: Would it
be fair to say in hindsight Congress should not have been involved in the Terri Schiavo
case?
SEN. McCAIN: I think
it's easy in hindsight to make a judgment. But I do know at the time that many of us, or
the overwhelming majority of us as well as the American people saw a young woman whose
life was going to end, whose parents and brothers and sisters wanted to care for her.
That's what I think made it so compelling. So in hindsight, perhaps we shouldn't have. At
the time, I understand the emotion, all of us. Who was not moved by seeing the films of
this woman, young woman?
MR. RUSSERT: And yet it
turns out that she was blind.
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me
turn to another ethical, moral, political issue, stem cell research. In 2000, John McCain
and 19 other senators wrote a letter which said "Since 1996 Congress has banned
federal funding for `research in which a human embryo or embryos are destroyed.' ...we
support [this law]." You've changed your mind.
SEN. McCAIN: Yes, I
have.
MR. RUSSERT: Why?
SEN. McCAIN: For a
large number of reasons, ranging from getting briefed by very smart people on this issue
and including discussing this with Nancy Reagan who, as you know, is a very strong
advocate for stem cell research. I want to make it clear that those of us who support this
do not believe that it has anything to do with human cloning and all of us are against
human cloning. I look forward to the debate. It's a very complex scientific issue. But for
us to throw away opportunities to cure diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's and
many others I think would be a mistake. I look forward to the debate. It's interesting
that more than two-thirds of the American people support stem cell research.
MR. RUSSERT: There is a
discussion now in legislation which would say that embryos created in fertilization
clinics that are not used by the couple to have another baby could be used for stem-cell
research. Others say, no, no, they should be given to other couples, so-called snowflake
babies. Where do you come down on that?
SEN. McCAIN: I think
that--first of all, I don't claim to be an expert. But, second of all, I think that should
be up to the couples that--whose embryos they are. I think that's a decision that they
should probably make.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me
turn to judicial nominations. You and 13 other senatorsseven Democrats, seven
Republicans--got together and said...
SEN. McCAIN: Commonly
known as the Gang of 14.
MR. RUSSERT: ...Gang of
14--and said that we will not invoke the nuclear option, which would say that you no
longer needed 60 votes to have filibusters--to end filibusters, and that some of these
candidates the president had nominated would be voted on. You were roundly, roundly
discussed, and dismissed, in some circles. Human Events had this headline: "McCain: A
Sell-Out On Principles and Party." Rush Limbaugh said, "We had McCain-Feingold.
This is McCain-the middle finger!" Paul Weyrich said, "[McCain can] forget about
his presidential ambitions." "McCain is now dead meat." Grover Norquist, of
the Americans for Tax Reform, said, "...McCain brokered the deal to betray his
Republican colleagues by negotiating a private surrender to the Democrats...No Republican
could expect to win the GOP nod after betraying his party's rank-and-file on one of
their"--"central concerns."
SEN. McCAIN: Well,
first of all, I respect their opinions, and I appreciate that--the frustration that they
felt because I think that there was going to be a huge showdown of very large proportions.
I believe strongly that our Founding Fathers designed the United States Senate with the
purpose of protecting the rights of minority. That's why they gave two votes to Rhode
Island and two votes to New York and two votes to Virginia. And that's why we have two
votes for Wyoming and two for California. Second of all, Republicans in the past have
filibustered nominees, judicial nominees, and they have blocked judicial nominees when
President Clinton was president. They kept them from coming out of the Judiciary
Committee. I think it would be very dangerous to change the rules of the Senate with just
a majority vote. And we also felt--and I feel very strongly--that Americans want us to get
back on to issues that are important to them. And issues that are important to them right
now are energy, transportation, the economy, the climate, environmental issues. And one of
the reasons why I think we are held in such low esteem by the American people is because
we are probablythey don't view us as addressing their agenda.
But, getting back to
that, both parties were at the edge of the precipice. We pulled back. We have now had six
of the president's nominees confirmed. I believe that will set the stage for a reasonable
debate on a Supreme Court nominee, which is largely what this whole situation was about.
Both parties, majority of both parties in the Senate, are glad that we didn't have this
confrontation. The Democrats would have had to slow down the Senate. And we wouldn't have
achieved anything except appropriations bills. And Republicans might have done something
that they would have been sorry for if we were ever in the minority again with a liberal
Democrat president.
So I'm proud of what we
did. I am pleased at the results so far, and I'm confident that because most of our
colleagues are glad we diffused the situation that we--every day that goes by and every
judge that's confirmed it's less likely we will have this huge confrontation again.
MR. RUSSERT: Do you
believe that if the president sends forward a nominee for Supreme Court and the Democrats
don't like it and begin to filibuster, that Republicans will try to invoke the nuclear
option and then filibuster with 51 votes?
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah. But,
in all due respect, it's not up to 45 Democrats or 55 Republicans. It's up to the 14 that
made this agreement. And I am confident, one, that the president's not going to send over
somebody that would provoke a filibuster because that's not in his interest to do so. But,
second of all, I believe we have set a standard of "extraordinary
circumstances," that it will be clear in the minds of at least the majority of the 14
of us whether they're extraordinary circumstances.
MR. RUSSERT: Has the
president told you that he wouldn't send someone over?
SEN. McCAIN: No. No. Of
course not. No. But I think I know the president well enough that he has a broaden--a
large number of people who are highly qualified who would not provoke a filibuster in the
United States Senate.
MR. RUSSERT: November
1999, Republican presidential primary debate. The question to John McCain: "Who would
be your role model for your first justice named to the Supreme Court?" John McCain:
"I guess my particular role model would be Judge Scalia."
SEN. McCAIN: I think he
would be frankly someone who would be approved by the Senate.
MR. RUSSERT: You do?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
believe he would be filibustered. No, I don't. There's many others that I also would
strongly approve of as well.
MR. RUSSERT: Now,
Justice Scalia, as you know, believes that Roe vs. Wade, which made abortion legal in this
country, was incorrectly decided. Do you agree with him?
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah, I
certainly do to some degree because it was based on medical knowledge and technology at
the time that indicated that children are not viable at its earliest stage as they are
today. So it certainly wasn't based on sound, up-to-date medical technology. We save
babies every day that are premature at a very early stage. Thank God.
MR. RUSSERT: What would
happen if Roe vs. Wade was overturned?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
know. I don't know what would happen because I don't think it's going to be.
MR. RUSSERT: You don't?
SEN. McCAIN: No. I
don't think it is at least not any time soon given the tenor of politics in America and
the courts in America.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me
turn to the environment. "Sens. John McCain (R-AZ) and Joseph Lieberman (D-CT)
unveiled their plan to require all U.S. power plants and industries to set mandatory
targets for the reduction of industrial greenhouse gas emissions ..." global warming.
Do you have the votes to pass that?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
know because it's interesting. There's--Joe and I added a nuclear component to it which
has upset some of the environmental groups. We did that because we believed that with 20
percent of America's energy supply today being supplied by nuclear and that being reduced
that in the state of technology we need to add that as a component. There's a kind of a
thing that happens in the Senate. When an issue finally becomes really salient and risk a
majority, somebody comes up with a "alternative," and there are a couple of
alternatives out there that really don't reduce the emission of greenhouse gases. They do
some good things, but we've got to start reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases now.
And we can do that with cap and trade which is a free-market kind of process. And I
believe that we will--I think there's every chance that we could get close to or a
majority depending on how well people understand that the alternatives do not reduce the
emissions of greenhouse gases. It may reduce the rate of growth of them, but not the
emissions themselves.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator,
let me show you a story from Wednesday's New York Times. "Philip A. Cooney, the
former White House staff member who repeatedly revised government scientific reports on
global warming, will go to work for Exxon Mobil this fall. ... Mr. Cooney resigned as
chief of staff for President Bush's environmental policy council...two days after
documents obtained by the New York Times revealed that he had edited the reports in ways
that cast doubt on the link between the emission of greenhouse gases and rising
temperatures." What do you think of that?
SEN. McCAIN: I'm
shocked. Shocked that such a thing should be happening. I also noted that he immediately
he went back to work with ExxonMobil. Maybe he should have waited a month or two. I'm
sorry this is happening. I'd like to see the administration far more involved in this
issue. There's a requirement, for example, of a report on greenhouse gas emissions that
are being ignored by the administration, NOAA in particular. I know that Tony Blair has
made a strong case to the president, and I know that there are some stirrings with the
administration to start addressing this issue and I'm glad to see that happening, but this
is serious. It's real. We see in democracies crises and problems that are upon us and we
need to solve them. That's the nature of a representative government. The terrible thing
about climate change is that we're not going to see the effects of this for some years
ahead of us although we're seeing some now in the Arctic, in the Antarctic and other
manifestations of it. But the worst effects of it are down the road, and if we wait until
those effects have taken place, then it's going to have serious consequences. Tony Blair
said--look, suppose we act now and develop these technologies and reduce the emissions of
greenhouse gases and there's no such thing as climate change, we have a cleaner world. But
suppose we're right and climate change is taking place and we don't act, it's very serious
consequences for our environment.
MR. RUSSERT: You gave
an interview to Men's Journal. Question: "What will be Bush's legacy on the
environment?" Sen. McCain: "...It's extremely low... And I'm very sorry for
that." Question: "Does the influence of major corporations have something to do
with that?" Sen. McCain: "...I'm not sure why there has been such great
resistance in the Bush administration to do, you know, almost anything. It's
terrible."
SEN. McCAIN: Well, let
me clarify, if I can. First of all, I think the administration has done a lot for our
national parks. I think they've done a lot in a lot of areas. I think they've had a
reasonable approach to some of our more extreme environmental laws. And I think they have
done some good things. On the issue of climate change, I'm very disappointed. I will tell
you honestly, I am emotionally involved in the issue. And perhaps maybe I was too harsh in
my comments in that interview, but I really feel very strongly about the issue. I've been
to the Arctic. I've seen where the polar ice cap is melting. I've seen the effects of it.
And I think we need to act. I really do. And by the way, I think it's one of the issues
that causes problems between ourselves and Europeans.
MR. RUSSERT:
Another issue confronting this administration: tobacco. The Justice Department head said
in its legal proceedings that it would take $130 billion over 25 years to educate the
American people about how to stop smoking. And then, suddenly, there was an offer made
that they would settle for $10 billion. Janet Reno, the former attorney general, said that
politics has crept into this decision. What do you say?
SEN. McCAIN: I
say, one, I don't know enough about it. And, two, if you make that accusation, you should
have some kind of proof. Would I have liked to have seen that number higher? I think so.
But I don't know enough about the legal aspects of it to make a valid comment on that. But
I'd like to see more. We've had--I had a bill on the issue of tobacco years ago that
failed in the Senate. And then following that was this tobacco agreement, which has been
largely a failure because the states have not used those moneys to support antismoking and
anti-tobacco programs in most cases.
MR. RUSSERT:
But the professional staff at Justice wanted to go for the $130 billion.
SEN. McCAIN:
But, again, I...
MR. RUSSERT:
Should the attorney general back them up and instruct his attorney to go for the $130
billion?
SEN. McCAIN: I
think the attorney general probably, given the controversy, should explain why the
decision was made that was made.
MR. RUSSERT: In 2002,
you and John Kerry had legislation to raise gas mileage for cars and sport utility
vehicles to 36 miles per gallon by 2015. You still for that?
SEN. McCAIN: I'm for
it. I think we need to increase CAFE standards. I'm focusing a lot of my attention,
obviously, on this bill on climate change. But we're going to be driven to it, Tim. If the
price of oil stays above $50 a barrel, which every expert I know says it will, because
China and India are consuming any excess oil capacity that may evolve, then we're going to
see hybrid cars. We're already seeing it: hybrid cars and a lot of other innovations. And,
by the way, it'd be nice to see some of those innovations come from Detroit rather than
from Japan.
MR. RUSSERT: Won't
bills that would raise mileage per gallon to 36 miles a gallon hurt you in the central
primary in Michigan?
SEN. McCAIN: I'm sure
that it would. I'm sure that a number of other things that I've done would hurt me with
certain constituencies. And my opposition to ethanol has, obviously, hurt me. But you know
what I've found out? That every time I've done something for what may have been influenced
by political reasons, I've regretted it. Every time that I've done something that I think
is right, it's turned out OK in the end. I've got to do what I think is right. And if it
offends a certain political constituency, I regret it, but there's really nothing I can do
about it.
MR. RUSSERT: You joined
with Ted Kennedy with an immigration bill, a bill that would say, in effect, that you
would pay fines of at least $2,000 to begin earning permanent residency under the most
sweeping immigration reform bill in two decades, as it's been described. Your colleague
from Arizona, J.D. Hayworth, said this: He "criticized the [McCain/Kennedy
Immigration Reform] bill as a `bad idea not only because it creates a transparent path to
amnesty, but also because it would reduce work opportunities, depress wages, lower worker
protections for Americans.'" What do you say?
SEN. McCAIN: I say that
I've had differences with my colleagues from Arizona from time to time. Important thing
is, we have to have immigration reform. I think it's a compelling issue of the day. Last
week a policeman opened a horse trailer where 80 people in Phoenix80 people were
crammed inside, including a four-month-old child. Twelve people died in the desert a few
weekends ago when we had some heat. We are making American employers engage in illegal
activity the way the system is today. It's broken. It's got to be fixed. And our borders
have got to be secured. We have a national security issue here. More and more people from
"countries of interest" are coming across our border. We have to secure our
borders. They are not secure. But we're not going to secure our borders until we address
the issue comprehensively, and that means matching, as the president says, willing workers
with willing employers. And we have to do something about the 10 to 11 million people who
are here in the United States illegally. And I don't believe you're going to take people
who are here 40 or 50 years and ship them back to the country that they came from.
So there has to be an
orderly process of providing workers to do jobs that Americans won't do. I'm happy to say
that, working with Senator Kennedy, we've come up with a proposal which has gotten
widespread support. The Chamber of Commerce is very supportive of it and certain Hispanic
organizations are very supportive of it. Now, are the extremes happy about it? No. On one
side, people just want amnesty. We tried that in the '80s; it didn't work. And on the
other side, they think that the only answer is to tightly secure or borders. As long as
there's a demand for workers, workers are going to try to get into the United States of
America. I hope that we can take up the issue of immigration reform. Senator Specter said
he's going to hold hearings in the Judiciary Committee. I welcome the debate. Senator
Kennedy and I don't believe that this is engraved anywhere on golden tablets. But we need
to have the debate and we need to act. And it is a matter of transcendent national
security as well as preventing these terrible abuses that are taking place--the abuses of
basic human rights that are taking place when people come here illegally and have no
protections of any of our laws.
MR. RUSSERT: We're
going to take a quick break. A lot more of our conversation with Senator John McCain, the
Republican from Arizona, right after this.
(Announcements)
MR. RUSSERT: The
political future of John McCain, after this brief station break.
(Announcements)
MR. RUSSERT: And we're
back with John McCain. Your interview, again, with Men's Journal. "`Did Kerry offer
you his vice-presidential spot?' McCain: `It was never officially offered, but he
certainly discussed it with me on several occasions.'"
SEN. McCAIN: True.
That's true. And John Kerry is a friend of mine and will remain a friend of mine.
MR. RUSSERT: Why didn't
you run with him?
SEN. McCAIN: I'm a
Republican. I'm--I follow hopefully the traditions and values of Abraham Lincoln, Theodore
Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. And there was just not a compatibility there. And I believed
that George Bush was far more qualified because of his leadership of this nation in the
war on terror to be president of the United States. And I--that's one reason why I
campaigned strongly for the president's re-election and I'm proud that he was re-elected.
MR. RUSSERT: You were
also asked do you want to be president? And you said "Absolutely."
SEN. McCAIN: It's
a--does anybody want to be president? I hardly know--you know, there's an old line of Mo
Udall's who said that if you're a United States senator unless you're under indictment or
detoxification, you automatically consider yourself a candidate for president of the
United States. Of course. I know very few people in public life that would not, "like
to be president." The question is not whether you'd like to be president or not. The
question is do you think you can win and do you want to run? And none of those are clear
to me, and that's why I'm going to wait a couple years before making any decision or
setting up any organization or going through the machinations that people go through when
they are going to run for president of the United States.
MR. RUSSERT: But it's
clearly an option?
SEN. McCAIN: I think
it's an option. But, again, I want to emphasize, I'm going to wait two years before making
that decision. I want to work hard and be a good senator. I want to represent the people
that just returned me to the Senate, the people of Arizona. I think it's appropriate to do
that.
MR. RUSSERT: Here's
your challenge, Senator, by everyone's analysis. Here's New Hampshire primary 2000. John
McCain beats George Bush 49-to-30. Amongst Independents, you won 62-to-19. Bush actually
beat you amongst Republicans, barely, but he did. Seventeen more primaries, the only state
that you carried, the Republicans, was your home state of Arizona. How do you win the
Republican nomination without winning the Republicans?
SEN. McCAIN: Well,
first of all, it's hard for me to answer because I haven't thought about it. But I do know
that polling numbers, if they mean anything, show me with strong support amongst all
Republicans. And that support, I think, may have been gained from what I've done in the
intervening years, including my support for President Bush's re-election, which I was
proud to do. And so what I see is just from my traveling around the country, which I do a
lot of, at the request of Republican officeholders or office seekers is a broad-based
support there. But at this stage of the game, it's basically mainly name ID that people
respond to these polls on and that's why we have campaigns. But that's--that would
obviously be a consideration if I made the decision in a couple years.
MR. RUSSERT: It is
interesting. The Washington Post put up these numbers. Hillary Clinton has an 81 percent
approval among Dems; 55 percent approval amongst Independents; 20 with the GOP. You have a
59 percent approval with Democrats; 59 with Independents; and just 56 with Republicans.
And what people point to--and this is an article in your hometown paper, the Arizona
Republic, "At Odds With Bush. John McCain repeatedly has taken maverick positions
that have put him at odds with President Bush's administration, and rankled his party's
right wing. Among McCain's stances that differ from those of Bush: tax
cuts...War...Domestic spending...Campaign-finance reform...Medicare...Drug
importation...Stem-cell research...Environment...Patients' rights...Judicial
appointments...2004 campaign," and particularly the rhetoric about John Kerry. The
fact is you are different than George Bush.
SEN. McCAIN: No. No.
I--the fact is that I'm different but the fact is that I have agreed with President Bush
far more than I have disagreed. And on the transcendent issues, the most important issues
of our day, I've been totally in agreement and support of President Bush. So have we had
some disagreements on some issues, the bulk--particularly domestic issues? Yes. But I will
argue my conservative record voting with anyone's, and I will also submit that my support
for President Bush has been active and very impassioned on issues that are important to
the American people. And I'm particularly talking about the war on terror, the war in
Iraq, national security, national defense, support of men and women in the military,
fiscal discipline, a number of other issues. So I strongly disagree with any assertion
that I've been more at odds with the president of the United States than I have been in
agreement with him.
MR. RUSSERT: In fact,
you have just hired his political consultant, Mark McKinnon, to work with you?
SEN. McCAIN: Tim, Mark
McKinnon and I got to know each other during the campaign, while I campaigned for
President Bush. But Mark McKinnon is a fine man. We share a passion for Pat Tillman, among
other things. But I've had no hiring or anything else with Mark McKinnon. I think he's a
fine man. But I have no payroll. I have no payroll.
MR. RUSSERT: But you'd
welcome his help if you decided to run?
SEN. McCAIN: If I
decided to run, I would welcome anyone's help, but particularly Mark McKinnon, because I
think he's a very fine man.
MR. RUSSERT: And you
did meet with him.
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah, but
I've met with him--I had lunch with him. I mean, it's not--and I met with him on--several
times in the past.
MR. RUSSERT: How about
this? E.J. Dionne--"McCain May Be Bush's Ticket. And here's where Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush, the president's brother, could be the deal-closer. Jeb Bush has said he will not run
in 2008. But that does not rule him out as a vice presidential candidate. If McCain won,
Jeb would be No. 2 to a president who"--would--"turn 72 on August 29, 2008, and
might well serve only a single term. If McCain lost, Jeb would have enhanced national
recognition for a run in 2012. If picking Jeb is the price of winning over George W.,
McCain will pay it."
SEN. McCAIN: I can't
even respond to something like that because if I have not decided whether I want to run
for president or not, how in the world could I contemplate something like--along the lines
of running with the president's brother, who I happen to admire a great deal, by the way.
But I'm--it's--I understand that there are slow days in the news world, and sometimes they
have to be filled. I admire E.J. Dionne a lot. But I hadn't--frankly, the thought never
crossed my mind until I read his article.
MR. RUSSERT: You would
be 72 years old, which would make you the oldest man ever elected president to a first
term. Would you consider making a pledge to serve just one term because of your age?
SEN. McCAIN: Again,
I--first of all, out of hand, I would say no, because I think then you condemn yourself to
lame-duck status. But, again, I have not contemplated--this is beginning to resemble the
"Saturday Night Live" skit.
MR. RUSSERT: I have one
of those, if you'd like to see it.
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah.
Yeah.
MR. RUSSERT: But let me
ask you seriously about your age because, back in 2000, "`You think you'll ever run
for president?' McCain: `In 2004, I expect to be campaigning for the reelection of Gov.
Bush, and by the year 2008, I believe that my age would not equip me to run.'" And
then you, rather humorously, said that you expect in 2008 to have your feet on the railing
of the old soldier's home waiting for someone to come blow the cavalry charge. And in your
book you wrote that you probably don't--you probably thought you wouldn't have the chance
to run again.
SEN. McCAIN: Yeah.
I--and, again, that's going to be part of the decision-making process. But my health is
excellent. You have had the pleasure of meeting my 93-year-old mother. So my genes, I
think, are pretty good. But that would obviously be a factor in this decision making
process. There's no doubt about that.
MR. RUSSERT: How's your
health?
SEN. McCAIN: Excellent.
Excellent.
MR. RUSSERT: How's your
cancer?
SEN. McCAIN: Fine. You
know, I think most Americans may not understand that melanoma is something that, if
detected, can be treated very quickly. And it's when it goes undetected--that's why every
American should be wearing sunscreen when they go out in the sun this summer and don't
forget to do that. Otherwise, you may pay a very heavy price when you grow older.
MR. RUSSERT: So you
think you could go a couple rounds with Mike Tyson?
SEN. McCAIN: I don't
know. After his performance against Mr. McBride, I think maybe I could go more than that,
as long as he didn't try to break my arms.
MR. RUSSERT: Your hero,
Theodore Roosevelt. Let me show you a picture of him. This is from Fargo, North Dakota, in
September 1912. Mr. Roosevelt was then running as the bull moose candidate for president.
He tried to win the Republican nomination; lost to Senator Taft. If John McCain ran for
the presidency in the Republican primaries, carried the Independents, carried the
crossovers, but didn't receive the Republican nomination, would you ever consider running
as an Independent?
SEN. McCAIN: No, I
don't think that that would be possible, number one. And number two is I keep emphasizing
I'm of the party of Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. I see no other reason. By the
way, a new book is out on Roosevelt's post-presidency year. It's very excellent. And one
of the things he was seriously thinking about was running again in 1920. So...
MR. RUSSERT: You would
never run as an Independent?
SEN. McCAIN: I cannot
imagine a scenario where I would because, again, I would be leaving the party that I've
been a part of and loyal to and worked for for all my political life.
MR. RUSSERT: John
McCain, as always, we thank you for coming here and sharing your views.
SEN. McCAIN: Thank you,
Tim.
MR. RUSSERT: And we'll
be right back after this.
(Announcements)
MR. RUSSERT: Start your
day tomorrow on "Today" with Katie and Matt, then the "NBC Nightly
News" with Brian Williams. That's all for today. We'll be back next week. If it's
Sunday, it's MEET THE PRESS.
Happy Father's Day.
And, Luke, I love being your dad.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ID/8245636/ |