牛藥時報和花生蹲幽報都肯定了老麥曾經的豔遇. 轉CNN
(2008-02-22 07:29:05)
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February 21, 2008
Blitzer: Journalists \'not going to let up\' on McCain
Posted: 03:45 PM ET
Blitzer: The story of McCain and lobbyist Vicki Iseman may \'have legs.\'
Blitzer: The story of McCain and lobbyist Vicki Iseman may \'have legs.\'
WASHINGTON (CNN) — Once again, a major news organization makes a stunning allegation involving a prominent politician. This time it’s The New York Times versus John McCain.
The Republican presidential candidate went before the news media today to flatly deny the accusations – namely, that he may have had an improper relationship with a Washington telecommunications lobbyist, Vicki Iseman. And the New York Times issued a statement sticking by its story. Now, a lot of other major news organizations are following up.
The Washington Post wasted little time. In its front-page story today, reporters Jeffrey Birnbaum and Michael Shear confirmed an account in the Times of a meeting between former McCain senior adviser John Weaver and Iseman in Union Station in Washington where he “urged her to stay away from McCain.”
The Post reporters wrote: “Association with a lobbyist would undermine his image as an opponent of special interests, aides had concluded.” The Times said aides were concerned about what Iseman was saying publicly — whether she had given the impression of a special relationship with or special treatment from McCain.
Weaver was quoted on-the-record.
The Post then quoted unnamed sources as saying that the senator’s “small circle of advisers also confronted McCain directly…warning him that his continued ties to a lobbyist who had business before the powerful commerce committee he chaired threatened to derail his presidential ambitions” during his first White House bid in 2000.
McCain, at his news conference, denied that his senior staff had ever confronted him about his friendship with Iseman. He said they may have had discussions among themselves, but they never approached him.
That is but one of several discrepancies between what The Washington Post and The New York Times are reporting, on the one hand, and what McCain and his campaign are saying on the other.
Here’s the bottom line: I suspect this story, as we in the journalistic community say, has legs. News organizations are not going to let up – not yet, especially when a potential President of the United States is concerned.
–CNN Anchor Wolf Blitzer
Filed under: Wolf Blitzer