McCain, after all (a man who clearly has an eye for pretty
ladies), already double-timed his starter wife, Philadelphia model
Carol Shepp for a trophy model. As the story goes, after returning from
his POW experience and finding Shepp permanently disabled from a
serious car accident, McCain started having an affair with the
statuesque and wealthy beer industry heiress Cindy Hensley. He then
dumped Shepp as so much damaged goods. So it's not as though this guy
is going to be campaigning on a strong pro-family platform.
No,
the reason his aides, back in 1998-2000, started working behind the
scenes to keep Iseman away from McCain, and confronted McCain over his
dalliances was because McCain, who had a history of corruption, most
notably his card-carrying membership in the Keating Five savings and
loan scandal, couldn't afford to appear to be backsliding.
It
isn't, that is to say, a matter of whether or not McCain was diddling
Vicki. It's whether he was delivering for her and her clients, perhaps
in return for her delivering for him.
As the New York Times
reported in its investigative story on the McCain/Iseman liason,
published February 21, the media were reporting back in 2000 on how
McCain had been writing letters on behalf of some of Iseman's telecom
clients.
The Times article reports that McCain wrote letters in
1998 and 1999 to the Federal Communications Commission urging it to
uphold marketing agreements that would allow TV companies like
Glencairn Ltd., an Iseman client, to control two stations in the same
city. The paper says the senator also introduced a measure in the
Senate that would create tax incentives for minority ownership of
stations, a measure sought by Iseman on behalf of several media
clients. McCain also on two occasions reportedly pushed legislation
that would permit a company to control television stations in
overlapping markets. That was a measure being sought by Paxson (now Ion
Media Networks), yet another Iseman client.
The Times reports
that in 1999, Iseman asked Mr. McCain's staff to send a letter to the
FCC seeking approval of a television deal being sought by Paxon. McCain
sent that letter, and a second one — a level of interference which led
to a rebuke from the then FCC chairman.
So what's the story
here? Is it whether Sen. McCain is an adulterer? Or is it whether he is
a rank hypocrite posing as a Mr. Clean Government?
The problem
may be that what McCain was doing shilling for the telecom industry is
not illegal, and is not uncommon. In fact, it's what our legislators
do. Virtually all of them. The only thing different about McCain is
that he claims he doesn't do that, at least not since he saw the light
when he nearly went to jail for it, or at least had a near political
death experience after hitching his nascent congressional career to a
corrupt banker's wagon.
Meanwhile, we see once again what a
wussy newspaper the New York Times is — at least where investigating
the Right is concerned. Once again, we learn, this time from the New
Republic, that the Times and its executive editor, Bill Keller, held,
this time for over two months, a political story that the public had a
need and right to know about during a critical election campaign. How
different might the presidential campaign look now if the Times had run
its story in December, when it was ready to go, well ahead of the Iowa
caucus and the New Hampshire primary, instead of now when McCain has
the Republican nomination all but sewn up?
This kind of
dithering and backpedaling and censorship by Keller, which reportedly
followed intense lobbying and threats by McCain and his campaign,
recalls Keller's holding (for a year, and until after the 2006
Congressional election!) of a reporter's story about the National
Security Agency's illegal warrantless spying program, and his holding
and ultimately killing of an already typeset story (a week before the
2004 presidential election) about the remote cueing device on President
George Bush's back and in his ear during the 2004 presidential debates.
(See my story on this in FAIR's Extra magazine and in Mother Jones
magazine.)
We are left to wonder, what other great stories is Keller hiding from us, perhaps until after Election Day this November?
We
are also left wondering how the Times can justify running a glowing
editorial endorsement of McCain for the New York state primary at a
time that the paper already had, ready to publish, it story exposing
him as a sleeze and a crook on the hook to the telecom industry.