McCain rides on a wave of optimism
PHOENIX - In July, when John McCain got off the plane in
New Hampshire, he carried his own bags.
His "Straight Talk Express" at the time was a passenger van, not the 40-foot coach that snaked its way through Manhattan yesterday.
Back then, the Arizona senator met with crowds of 100 people or fewer, not the thousands who now attend his rallies.
The past six months have been a reversal of fortune for McCain, and his strong showing on Super Tuesday puts him closer to winning the Republican Party's presidential nomination.
"He literally picked the campaign up and carried it on his back," said Steve Duprey, a McCain volunteer from Concord, N.H., who has been traveling with the candidate. "I'm 54 years old, and it was a great lesson in leadership," Duprey said.
If nothing else, McCain's position as front-runner is a case study of determination. In 2000, a bid to win the GOP nomination failed with George W. Bush defeating him. This time out, his campaign stumbled, and he trailed former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani in early polls.
"Senator McCain has put on an unbelievable campaign, when you think about where the senator was in the middle of the summer and the early fall, because of his determination," Giuliani said Monday while campaigning with McCain in Hamilton, N.J.
McCain started yesterday with an early-morning rally in Rockefeller Center and then flew to San Diego, where he held a rally inside an airport hangar.
Despite being a former prisoner of war in Vietnam, and escaping death in 1967 when his ship, the USS Forrestal, caught fire and 134 men were killed, McCain told voters on the trail that he always remained an optimist, and promised he'd bring that quality to the presidency.
In San Diego, he noted: "As I've said on numerous occasions, here's a guy who stood fifth from the bottom of his class at the Naval Academy. If my old company officer, a Marine captain, were here today, he'd say, 'In America anything is possible.'"Supporters catch on to his 'Straight Talk'
Republican results
Total delegates at stake 2,380
Total needed to nominate 1,191
Previous Won Other/super
totals yesterday delegates Total
John McCain 96 270 17 383
Mitt Romney 93 43 9 135
Mike Huckabee 26 25 3 54
Ron Paul 6 0 0 6
McCAIN
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
Photos
Popular stories
- Tropical storm warning for LI as Hanna looms
- Cookbook politics: Democrats, Republicans in the kitchen
- David Letterman remembers Warren Zevon, talks about his future
- Jon Bon Jovi hosting Obama fundraiser
- Brewers start September with 4 straight losses, but others in NL postseason chase falling, too
Special Packages
View the latest multimedia offerings from amNY.com.
Endangered New York Read about historic buildings and areas and efforts to preserve them.
Flash | Photos
WTC Relics See video and photos of steel and other artifacts sifted from ground zero.
Complete Coverage
Recent Multimedia
Celebrities at Fashion Week
Venus and Serena Williams through the years and at the U.S. Open
John McCain: Early years
Michael Phelps hangs out, swims in New York
U.S. Open celebrities and tennis stars around New York
Sarah Palin and her family
NFL Kickoff Show in NYC
Annual Tomatina food fight in Spain
Tennis hotties
Michael Jackson through the years
Hangin' in the Hamptons
Guess the celeb from the high school photo
Olympian Shawn Johnson, Jennifer Hudson, other celebrities at Democratic convention
Barack Obama through the years
At the DNC: Day 3
Sarah Palin: The early years
American Idol judges Kara DioGuardi, Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson in New York
Sarah Palin, north star
Tiger Woods, Elin and baby Sam
Olympic goddesses




