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McCain Crooked-talk Express |
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Written by Henry Payne, Planet Gore
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Tuesday, 22 July 2008 |
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John McCain’s whiplash-inducing u-turns on auto-emissions mandates (as of Thursday he’s for
the states setting individual standards) is an uncomfortable sign for a
man who would have the wheel of U.S. regulatory policy. And for
politicos who see Michigan as a crucial state for McCain’s election
chances, the senator’s driving must be even more worrisome. Detroit News business columnist Dan Howes has been talking to auto folks and had this to say:
Does
anyone in the Arizona senator's campaign, which stopped Friday at
General Motors Corp.'s Tech Center in Warren, actually brief the
candidate? Do they know the difference between a single national
standard for emissions and allowing the zealots in the California
Assembly to set their own emissions targets? Do they know how much each
costs? Do they care? If not, why waste time here?
What's McCain doing?
You'd
think before you come to Detroit or GM, you'd have a pretty concise
answer on this," an executive with a rival automaker tells me.
"Michigan should be a competitive state for him, but it almost feels
like he's doing what he can to lose it."
Yes, it does. The Big
Mitten, the sickest state economy in America, is shaping up to be a
battleground in this fall's election. How does it make political sense,
then, for McCain to swoop in, do a 180 in the name of "federalism" and
punt on the national emissions standard that Detroit (and, truth be
told, Toyota and the others) desperately want and that he once said he
supported? Source
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