Sen. John
McCain has emerged as President Donald Trump's top Republican nemesis on
Capitol Hill.
Since
Trump's inauguration, McCain has broken with the president on his immigration
order, warned him against any rapprochement with Moscow, lectured him on the
illegality of torture, and supplied only a tepid endorsement of Rex Tillerson,
Trump's secretary of state nominee.
Oh, and
McCain also hammered Trump for backing away from - instead of embracing -
international free trade agreements.
As Trump
presses ahead with an ambitious and contentious agenda at home and abroad,
McCain is pushing back, using his seniority in Congress and his characteristic
bluntness. McCain, 80, cruised to a sixth Senate term in November, defeating a
Democratic challenger who hounded the senator for standing by Trump even after
the billionaire businessman insulted him as a "loser.''
Trump, who
received several draft deferments during the Vietnam era, also said there was
nothing heroic about McCain's military record after he was shot down during the
Vietnam War and spent 5 years as a prisoner of war.
McCain
dropped his support for Trump in early October after a 2005 recording surfaced
in which Trump boasted about groping women. The move led to an outcry from
conservative voters firmly behind Trump. But McCain overcame the backlash in
what may have been his final election.
Trump's
immigration order, signed by the president Friday, temporarily suspends all
immigration for citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries for 90 days.
McCain, along with his close friend and Senate colleague Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C., said they feared Trump's immigration order could "become a
self-inflicted wound in the fight against terrorism.''
"This
executive order sends a signal, intended or not, that America does not want
Muslims coming into our country. That is why we fear this executive order may
do more to help terrorist recruitment than improve our security,'' McCain and
Graham wrote.
That
elicited an angry tweet from Trump, who accused the two of "looking to
start World War III.''
McCain and
other senators said that Trump's order, unless amended, would ban Iraqi pilots
from coming to the United States for training so they can join the fight
against the Islamic State. The travel ban could also affect Iraqis who worked
with the U.S.-led coalition and, after lengthy reviews, received special
immigrant visas to enter the U.S., according to the lawmakers.
"I hope
that they are working to walk what they did back and learn that you better
really vet these decisions before you make them,'' McCain told reporters
Tuesday.
As chairman
of the Senate Armed Services Committee, McCain is one of the leading Republican
voices in Congress on national security matters. Re-elected last year to
another six years in office, he is free to challenge the president without fear
of retribution from voters.
U.S.-Russia
Relations
And perhaps
on no issue has McCain been more unequivocal than of Trump's desire for a
better relationship with Moscow.
Trump's
praise for Russian President Vladimir Putin before and after the election
signaled that U.S.-Russia relations could be getting a makeover - even after
U.S. intelligence agencies determined Moscow meddled in the campaign to help
Trump win.
But McCain
has little interest in detente with a country that has invaded Ukraine, annexed
Crimea, threatened America's NATO allies, and backed Syrian President Bashar
Assad's "murderous'' regime.
Ahead of a
telephone call on Saturday between the two leaders, McCain issued a blistering
statement in which he called Putin a "murderer and a thug'' who will never
be an ally of the United States. He cautioned Trump against lifting U.S.
sanctions against Russia and voiced his support for legislation that would broaden
the punishments and even codify them in law.
"Each
of our last three presidents had high hopes for building a partnership with the
Russian government,'' McCain said. "Each attempt failed, not for lack of
good faith and effort on the U.S. side, but because Putin wants to be our
enemy. He needs us as his enemy.''
McCain has
been bucking his own party for years. In the mid-1990s, he worked with
then-Sen. John Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat, to help President Bill Clinton
restore full diplomatic relations with Vietnam. McCain also teamed up with Sen.
Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., and, more recently, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to craft
bipartisan legislation aimed at repairing the nation's flawed immigration
system.
McCain
served in the U.S. House and then was elected to the Senate in 1986, succeeding
conservative Barry Goldwater. He will be 86 when his new term ends, making him
one of the oldest- and longest-serving members of the Senate.
(VOANews)
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