Mark Shields, nationally known columnist and
commentator, is the moderator of CNN's The Capital Gang
Mark Shields: The business lobby's campaign against McCain
Wednesday, November 27, 2002 Posted: 12:29 PM EST
(1729 GMT)
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WASHINGTON (Creators Syndicate) --Thanks to Robert Pear and Richard A. Oppel Jr. of
The New York Times, we know that the kingpins of America's drug companies
held an unpublicized, post-election victory and strategy summit at a private
location near Washington's Dulles airport.
After pharmaceutical companies had put more than $30 million into
congressional campaigns to elect their friends, the drug chiefs want and expect
a friendly Republican-run Congress to kill any profit-threatening price controls
on prescription drugs or any liberal scheme to allow citizens to buy cheaper,
generic versions of expensive brand-name medicines.
The Republican House promptly showed its gratitude by secretly inserting
provisions in the anti-terrorism Homeland Security Bill to allow Eli Lilly to
escape liability for any childhood autism linked to its smallpox vaccine and to
allow American companies that move their legal address offshore just to avoid
paying U.S. taxes to win federal contracts paid for by American taxpayers.
Apparently "drugged" and responsive to the entreaties of the nation's
commander-in-chief, who on the eve of the NATO meeting in Prague called asking
them to keep the corporate sweetheart deals in the security bill, Senate
Republicans were complicit with one exception -- John McCain of Arizona. He
condemned such special interest bonanzas for what they are, "war-profiteering,"
and added, "I don't think it's accidental that pharmaceutical companies
contributed $20 million to Republican candidates in the last election."
It is just that kind of blunt truth-telling that has made McCain, rather than
any congressional Democrat, the most-feared and loathed nemesis of Washington's
K Street business-political axis.
Unable to refute McCain's logic, his enemies follow the example of some Bush
operatives in the 2000 primaries -- they try to smear McCain's character. That
must have been the objective of the November 21 lead editorial in the Bush White
House's favorite newspaper, The Washington Times, which accused McCain of
basing his opposition to the special-interest provisions not on any principle,
but instead on the House bill's failure to include liability protection for the
Argenbright airport security company.
The Times editorial reported a conversation between McCain and House Majority
leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, in which McCain threatened to vote against the
homeland security bill without Argenbright 's getting special treatment, too.
There is a major problem: This is a big lie. According to Dick Armey's
handwritten note to the Arizona maverick, "I had no conversation with you on the
homeland defense bill, nor any part thereof, especially the issues of liability
limitations to airport screeners."
Nor was the lobbyist for Argenbright, as the Times editorial insisted, ever
either McCain's Senate staff director or ever the Senate Commerce staff director
under McCain. In fact, he was a legislative counsel on McCain's personal Senate
staff who left that post 14 years ago to go to work on the committee for
Missouri Sen. John Danforth, since retired.
When Senate GOP leadership asked the once and future Senate Commerce
Committee chairman for his reaction to the proposed liability exemptions for the
airport screener companies, McCain simply asked in a letter to Majority Leader
Trent Lott, R-Mississippi, if there was any reason why "all security companies
should not be afforded the same treatment under the law" and then added,
"However I have not been fully briefed on all aspects of this matter and ...
will leave the ultimate decision regarding this provision to your discretion."
No conversation between Armey and McCain -- according to Armey and McCain.
There is no evidence from anyone with a name or a face that McCain was ever, as
the Times editorial charges, the "champion of Argenbright."
There is only an ugly, baseless smear against this man, who almost alone
commands the trust of the voters and the credibility of the press to threaten by
public exposure those cozy deals, not in the common interest, between
Republicans in power and their corporate bankroller-cronies.
McCain, who on Thursday called conservative icon Rush Limbaugh (somebody who
obviously enjoys being taken seriously) "an entertainer" and went on to compare
Limbaugh to "a circus clown," drives right-wing Republicans bananas.
Knowing they cannot rebut his central claim that Big Money calls the tune in
our politics and in his party, some McCain enemies are simply out to discredit
his character and destroy his effectiveness. If they ever succeed, you can be
sure there will be few tears shed on Washington's K Street.
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"