McCain Lashes Out Against New York Times Over Story on Relationship With Lobbyist
John McCain speaks to reporters in Toledo, Ohio, Thursday about a story detailing his relationship with a female lobbyist in The New York Times, as his wife Cindy looks on. (AP Photo)
With his wife, Cindy, standing by his side, John McCain lashed out Thursday at a report in The New York Times that revisits the Republican presidential candidate’s relationship with a female lobbyist, and rebuked the paper for spreading false rumors.
The Times article described how campaign aides kept him and lobbyist Vicki Iseman apart during the 2000 election for fear they were giving the impression they were having an affair. It noted how McCain wrote to government regulators on behalf of a client of the lobbyist while he was chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee.
McCain called a press conference in Toledo, Ohio, to slam the paper for embellishing his committee activities on Iseman’s behalf.
“I’m very disappointed in The New York Times piece. It’s not true,” he said.
Asked about his relationship with the lobbyist, he said, “I have many friends in Washington who represent various interests and … I consider her a friend.”
He said he saw her “on occasion” at fundraisers, receptions and committee meetings, but that was all.
His wife Cindy, standing by his side, defended her husband, saying, “He’s a man of great character and I’m very disappointed in the New York Times.”
The article, published in Thursday’s edition of the Times but released the day before on its Web site, rehashes rumors spread during McCain’s 2000 presidential campaign.
The lengthy profile carried four bylines and detailed instances where McCain seemed to contradict his own anti-special interest message. It described, for instance, how he flew on corporate jets of executives looking for his support. The article was framed by accounts of his alleged relationship with Iseman.
McCain, 71, and Iseman, 40, long ago denied ever having a romantic relationship, but the story argues that “his confidence in his own integrity has sometimes seemed to blind him to potentially embarrassing conflicts of interest.”
Times Executive Editor Bill Keller released a statement Thursday saying, “On the substance, we think the story speaks for itself.
“On the timing, our policy is, we publish stories when they are ready. ‘Ready’ means the facts have been nailed down to our satisfaction, the subjects have all been given a full and fair chance to respond, and the reporting has been written up with all the proper context and caveats. This story was no exception. It was a long time in the works. It reached my desk late Tuesday afternoon. After a final edit and a routine check by our lawyers, we published it,” he said.
The Arizona senator said his campaign had been repeatedly contacted by the newspaper about the story.
“For months The New York Times has submitted questions and we have answered them fully and exhaustively, and unfortunately many of those answers were not included in the rather long piece in the New York Times,” he said.
McCain lamented that “this whole story is based on anonymous sources,” saying that could encompass any of the more than 100 aides he’s had contact with through the Commerce Committee.
The newspaper quoted anonymous aides as saying they had urged McCain and Iseman to stay away from each other prior to his failed presidential campaign in 2000. In its own follow-up story, The Washington Post quoted longtime aide John Weaver, who split with McCain last year, as saying he met with lobbyist Iseman and urged her to steer clear of McCain.
Weaver told the Times he arranged the meeting before the 2000 campaign after “a discussion among the campaign leadership” about Iseman.
Speaking with FOX News, Weaver said he met with Iseman at Union Station in either 1999 or 2000, he can’t remember which year, for about five minutes. The nature of the conversation was not about romantic involvement, but instead about how she was going around telling people how much enormous influence she had on McCain.
As a campaign professional, he said he didn’t want anyone saying they had influence over McCain so he met with her and told her to quit boasting, especially since McCain was making lobbying legislation at the time. Weaver said the conversation with Iseman and other related topics were well vetted by The Boston Globe during the New Hampshire primary in 2000.
But McCain said he was unaware of any such conversation, and denied that his aides ever tried to talk to him about his interactions with Iseman.
“Since it was in The New York Times, I don’t take it at face value,” McCain said with a laugh.
Iseman’s firm Alcalde & Fay released a statement Thursday decrying the article’s contents as “malicious innuendo” that is “utterly false.”
“Alcalde & Fay’s relationship with Senator McCain has been professional, appropriate and consistent with his legislative, jurisdictional and constituent duties,” president Kevin Fay said in the statement. “The story is based upon the fantasies of a disgruntled former campaign employee and is without foundation or merit. Ms. Iseman is a hard working professional whose 18 year career has been exemplary and she has our full support. It is beneath the dignity of a quality newspaper to participate in such a campaign of character assassination.”
Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager in 2000, told FOX News on Thursday that the campaign never had deep concerns about the relationship with Iseman or allegations of illicit favors for her client.
“I never had a single instance where this was a major issue in our campaign or any kind of an issue. And the idea that a decade later they have somehow uncovered some kind of a mystery is ridiculous,” Davis said.
Campaign spokeswoman Jill Hazelbaker likened the report to a “kind of gutter politics.”
“There is nothing in this story to suggest that John McCain has ever violated the principles that have guided his career,” she said.
Davis said the newspaper “didn’t say that there was anything improper here. They just tried to imply it. They didn’t say he had done anything for this lobbyist or this lobbying firm but they tried to imply it. If they are going to go this kind of route, why don’t they tell us where they got the information?”
The Times had endorsed McCain and Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton prior to the Super Tuesday primaries in New York Feb. 5.
With McCain now the presumptive nominee of his party, he said Thursday he intends to put the Times story to rest and move forward with the campaign.
Rumors of the newspaper’s investigation first surfaced two months ago, and at the time, senior officials in the McCain campaign adamantly denied to FOX News any personal or professional wrongdoing. Officials also confirmed that McCain had hired Washington attorney Bob Bennett to prepare the campaign for the coming “smear.” Bennett continues to be on retainer at this time.
“If there’s one thing I am absolutely confident of, it’s that John McCain is an honest man,” Bennett told FOX News Wednesday night. “I think for The New York Times to dig this up just shows that John McCain’s public statement about this is correct. It’s a smear job.”
Asked about the article, Republican rival Mike Huckabee wouldn’t comment on the newspaper’s allegations, but said he knows McCain to “be a man of integrity.”
“He is a good and decent and honorable man,” Huckabee said.
When details of the newspaper’s investigation emerged in December, McCain said he was going to battle the rumors much more vigorously than he fought other claims made against him in 2000.
“We’re getting close to the primary,” McCain said in December before he emerged as the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. “These allegations are coming out at a very interesting time, and I have never, ever done a favor for any lobbyist or special interest group.”
McCain’s denials in December, including of the alleged affair, was in response to expectations that the Drudge Report was going to preempt the investigation before the newspaper actually reported it, campaign officials said.
Though Drudge did not print the story, campaign officials contend that the newspaper decided to go ahead and publish it now because The New Republic was planning a scathing critique of the newspaper for revealing the contents of its investigation.
McCain campaign officials said two weeks ago, they got a call from The New Republic asking for comment and information because it was planning a story on the newspaper’s investigation.
Officials argued The New York Times, buffeted by reporter scandals in recent years, is covering itself, publishing a deliberate smear under pressure from the magazine and because of sensitivity to its reputation caused by reporter Judith Miller, who investigated Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program and was a key player in the subsequent CIA leak investigation involving Valerie Plame.
The McCain stories also allege that the Arizona senator wrote letters and pushed legislation involving television station ownership that would have benefited Iseman’s clients.
In late 1999, McCain twice wrote letters to the Federal Communications Commission on behalf of Florida-based Paxson Communications — which had paid Iseman as its lobbyist — urging quick consideration of a proposal to buy a television station license in Pittsburgh. At the time, Paxson’s chief executive, Lowell W. “Bud” Paxson, also was a major contributor to McCain’s 2000 presidential campaign.
McCain did not urge the FCC commissioners to approve the proposal, but he asked for speedy consideration of the deal, which was pending from two years earlier. In an unusual response, then-FCC Chairman William Kennard complained that McCain’s request “comes at a sensitive time in the deliberative process” and “could have procedural and substantive impacts on the commission’s deliberations and, thus, on the due process rights of the parties.”
McCain addressed the letters Thursday, saying: “I said I’m not telling you how to make a decision; I’m just telling you that you should move forward and make a decision on this issue. I believe that was appropriate.”
Click here to read The New York Times profile of John McCain.
Read The Washington Post report.
Click here to read the story behind the story in The New Republic.
FOX News’ Jim Angle and Carl Cameron and The Associated Press contributed to this report.





For God’s sake, if you men were married to Cindy McCain, would you have an affair with anyone? She is beautiful and he obviously loves her!!!
John McCain has discipline and honor and integrity, plus the lady in question denies it all!!!
Fa-gid-about it!
And Thank you.
In response to Felix’s comments regarding McCain selling out his fellow POW’s: Felix … yes … McCain surely is a survivor … but not the kind of survivor this country needs … we need a leader who will not only save his own ass … but also those of his fellow countrymen. McCain sold out is fellow troops while in Viet Nam and the press is guilty for not investigating and holding McCain responsible. Then McCain fought tooth and nail to prevent the facts from being released. The only reason he didn’t face a court marshal for treason is because his daddy was an admiral at the time. Read this article and learn the truth > http://www.usvetdsp.com/smith_mc.htm > John McCain should not be allowed to hold any sort of office that represents our “on the ropes” but still great nation. The fact that Bush endorses him is a testament to his character too.
This is just the press being hypocrites … what politician hasn’t cheated on his wife. McCain may not be pristine … hey, he screwed around on his first wife … if you wanted to nail him to the cross you should have done it then. Get off his back already … next you’ll be bringing up the latest negative report about his fund raising. Obama and Clinton break the rules when it comes to fund raising .. why can’t McCain do it too. I’m sick and tired too of the Viet Nam vets who are trying to destroy McCain. His dad was an admiral … it only makes sense that he should get special treatment and if he ratted out some of fellow POW’s … that’s war … he did what he had to do to survive. He made 32 propoganda tapes for the Viet Cong … so what … that just shows that he’s able to adapt to a situation when life is in jeopardy. He’s a survivor and if America is to survive the mess we are in … we need a survivor in the WHite House. Cast your vote for John McCain!!!
Who cares the only reason this is news is because ‘conservatives’ care who you sleep with. OMG what does that have to do with running for President? Hello, he is also divorced and I quote Carol Shepp, (a model back in the day) “I attribute [the breakup of our marriage] more to John turning 40 and wanting to be 25 again than I do to anything else.” Then he went to Cindy. Now do you understand that this all nonsense? Even if he did sleep with Vicki who cares! Clinton has Flowers, Jones and Lewinsky. I think he was a pretty good president. P.S. FDR had Lucy Mercer. Conservatives and there moral crap need to shut-up and just be Americans as in what is the best for our country. Our country as in the PEOPLE Thank God that the next president will be a Democrat.
If I did subscribe to the New York Times, I would cancel my subscription based on this blatant reporting of nothing factual. Leave the slander to the the gossip papers. A periodical the size of the NYT should report only with facts.
McCain is a liar or a perjurer
John McCain either lied on Thursday at his press conference when he said “insisted that McCain had never even spoken with anybody from Paxson or Alcalde & Fay about the matter.” or John McCain committed perjury in a sworn deposition.
Two people contradict John McCain on this
Lowell “Bud” Paxson
1) Paxson said he talked with McCain in his Washington office several weeks before the Arizona Republican wrote the letters in 1999 to the FCC urging a rapid decision on Paxson’s quest to acquire a Pittsburgh television station.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/22/AR2008022202634.html?tid%3Dinformbox&sub=AR
John McCain himself
2) In a 2002 deposition John McCain says “I’m sure I spoke to [Paxson].”
McCain agreed that his letters on behalf of Paxson, a campaign contributor, could “possibly be an appearance of corruption”
McCain’s subsequent letters to the FCC—coming around the same time that Paxson’s firm was flying the senator to campaign events aboard its corporate jet and contributing $20,000 to his campaign—first surfaced as an issue during his unsuccessful 2000 presidential bid. William Kennard, the FCC chair at the time, described the sharply worded letters from McCain, then chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, as “highly unusual.”
http://www.newsweek.com/id/114505