Showing posts with label Cindy McCain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cindy McCain. Show all posts


World News : Earmarks is hot topics for McCain, Palin criticize Obama ??
LEE'S SUMMIT, Mo. - John McCain and Sarah Palin criticized Democrat Barack Obama over the amount of money he has requested for his home state of Illinois, even though Alaska under Palin's leadership has asked Washington for 10 times more money per citizen for pet projects.

At a rally in swing state Missouri, the Republican presidential nominee and his running mate accused Obama of requesting nearly $1 billion in earmarks for his state during his time as a senator. The new line of attack came after Obama made his first direct criticism of Palin over the weekend, using the topic of earmarks, which are special projects that lawmakers try to get for their districts and constituents.

"Just the other day our opponent brought up earmarks — and frankly I was surprised that he would even raise the subject at all," Palin said. "I thought he wouldn't want to go there."

Obama hasn't asked for any earmarks this year. Last year, he asked for $311 million worth, about $25 for every Illinois resident. Alaska asked this year for earmarks totaling $198 million, about $295 for every Alaska citizen.

Palin has cut back on pork project requests, but under her administration, Alaska is still and by far the largest per-capita consumer of federal pet-project spending.

The governor did reject plans to build the notorious "Bridge to Nowhere" after Congress had cut off its financing.

McCain and Palin were presented as a maverick team in a campaign ad released Monday that played up their reputation for taking on entrenched interests. The ad credits Palin with stopping the bridge without mentioning she once appeared to support it.

President Bush, who came to Washington as a former Texas governor without national legislative experience, called the Alaska governor "an inspired pick" by McCain.

"She's had executive experience, and that's what it takes to be a capable person in here in Washington, D.C., in the executive branch," he said in a Fox News interview to be shown Tuesday. In Rome, Vice President Dick Cheney also sought to deflect Democratic criticism that Palin, a former small-town mayor with less than two years in the governor's office, lacks the gravity to be vice president.

"Each administration is different," he said. "And there's no reason why Sarah Palin can't be a successful vice president in a McCain administration." He said her convention speech was superb.

In attacking Obama on Monday, McCain said the Illinois senator's earmark total over the years amounts to "almost a million dollars for every single day he was in the United States Senate."

For his part, McCain doesn't seek pork projects and vows to do away with them as president.

While speaking to voters in Indiana over the weekend, Obama ridiculed the idea of McCain and Palin presenting themselves as reformers, and suggested Palin was distorting her own record on earmarks.

"I know the governor of Alaska has been saying she's change, and that's great," Obama said Saturday. "She's a skillful politician. But, you know, when you've been taking all these earmarks when it's convenient, and then suddenly you're the champion anti-earmark person, that's not change. Come on! I mean, words mean something, you can't just make stuff up."

In a conference call with reporters, Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania questioned McCain's assertions that Palin has the necessary experience and record.

"I think she has tremendous potential, but she in no way shape or form is ready to be president of the United States," said Rendell, who knows Palin through the National Governors Association. "And that's something we've got to get across to the American people."

World News : Earmarks is hot topics for McCain, Palin criticize Obama ??




World news: Cindy McCain or Michelle Obama for the White House?

Cindy Lou Hensley McCain (born May 20, 1954) is an American businessperson and philanthropist, who is the wife of United States Senator and 2000 and 2008 presidential candidate John McCain of Arizona. She is chair of Hensley & Co.,one of the largest Anheuser-Busch beer distributors in the United States.

She founded and ran a non-profit organization, the American Voluntary Medical Team, from 1988 to 1995 that organized trips by medical personnel to disaster-struck or war-torn third-world areas. She continues to be an active philanthropist and serves on the boards of several charitable organizations.

Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama (born January 17, 1964) is an American lawyer and the wife of Illinois senator Barack Obama, the 2008 Democratic nominee for President. She was born and grew up on the South Side of Chicago and graduated from Princeton University and Harvard Law School. After completing her formal education, she returned to Chicago and went to work for the law firm Sidley Austin, on the staff of the Mayor of Chicago Richard M. Daley, and for the University of Chicago and the University of Chicago Hospitals. She is the sister of Craig Robinson, men's basketball coach at Oregon State University.

She met Barack when he went to work for Sidley Austin. The Obamas live on Chicago's South Side, choosing to remain there rather than moving to Washington, D.C.


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Cindy McCain or Michelle Obama for the White House?
Among fashionistas, the wives of the Republican and Democratic presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama are drawing the kind of enthusiasm that Nancy Reagan and Jacqueline Kennedy once attracted.

As might be expected, style mavens' critiques focus less on what the potential first ladies say or do than on what they wear.

While Obama won fans for wearing a relatively affordable $150 dress on talk show "The View," McCain drew attention for her expensive tastes. Vanity Fair magazine estimated one outfit she wore at the Republican National Convention this week was worth $300,000.

The choice a week ago of John McCain's running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who took part in beauty pageants in her youth, also has caused a buzz. But Mickey Blum, director of survey research at Baruch College, said her style could not be compared to McCain and Obama.

"That's a different look because you have to look a little bit more serious and professional," Blum said.

The consensus at New York Fashion Week is that both potential first ladies have style but most designers in the traditionally Democratic-leaning industry would much rather have the chance to dress Obama over McCain.

"I am in the fashion industry, I live in New York -- I'm probably not going to go for McCain to dress," designer Rebecca Taylor told Reuters.

"Michelle is really fresh and she could sort of go where Jackie O went given the right sort of tools and grooming," she said. "I think it could be nice for America to have somebody who's a little bit more stylish as their first lady."

Obama, 44, is a Princeton and Harvard educated lawyer who has appeared in Vogue and was named on Vanity Fair's 2008 International Best Dressed List for the second time.

PURPLE DRESS DREW PRAISE

Obama has won particular praise for a purple sheath dress and black belt she wore at a rally in June when her husband clinched the Democratic nomination as candidate for the Nov. 4 election.

"She has a kind of style which is accessible and also spans generations, it appeals to young girls and their grandmothers, it translates across class lines (and) racial lines," said Amy Fine Collins, special correspondent with Vanity Fair.

"Cindy McCain's look is one we are familiar with, she's absolutely right and absolutely appropriate for the role she's in, but it doesn't feel new," she said. "She has expensive tastes and less of a grab-it-and-go approach to clothes."

McCain, 54, chairs her family's business, beer distributor Hensley and Co., and has worked for international charities. Imogen Fox wrote in Britain's The Guardian newspaper that McCain is "always immaculate, with never a hair out of place."

"But this striving for perfection is also her un-doing: she doesn't know how to have fun with fashion," she said.

Designers and commentators note McCain favors tailored jackets and skirts, while Obama tends to wear dresses.

Designer Michael Angel said he would prefer to dress Obama and would create "the ultimate little shift dress" for her in a print silk twill. For McCain he could contribute a printed silk blouse for her to wear under one of her suits.

Raul Melgoza, creative director at Luca Luca, said he would be happy dressing either woman.

"Although they are different personalities -- McCain being more western and Obama being compared to Kennedy -- I feel like the common thread between them both is that they have a classic sensibility to their clothing," Melgoza told Reuters.

If the style of Obama and McCain has fashionistas buzzing, does it have any influence in the campaign?

"I don't think anyone's going to win or lose based on what the wives are wearing," Blum said. "What it does is give a general impression of what the wife is like and maybe family."

"Cindy McCain may have a look that's almost a little too polished and put together and her clothes might look a bit too expensive and out of reach for the average person," Blum said. "Michelle Obama dresses in clothes that seem much more accessible to ordinary women and working moms."

For Tim Gunn, style guru and mentor to the fledgling fashion designers on the television reality show "Project Runway," there is no contest.

"Michelle really epitomizes American style and she's not afraid to show her shape," he told New York Magazine.

"She's just an alluring woman. And Cindy with her suits, and she's all buttoned up, she's just soooo -- she just looks like she's duct-taped!"

(Additional reporting by Jan Paschal)

Copyright © 2008 Reuters

World news: Cindy McCain or Michelle Obama for the White House?