Latest Threads
Latest
Greatest Threads
Greatest
Lobby
Lobby
Journals
Journals
Search
Search
Options
Options
Help
Help
Login
Login
Home » Discuss » Journals » MH1 » Read entry Donate to DU
Advertise Liberally! The Liberal Blog Advertising Network
Advertise on more than 70 progressive blogs!
MH1's Journal
Posted by MH1 in General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009)
Sat Nov 01st 2008, 09:19 PM
Looks like McCain doesn't have much confidence in his technology platform, or else doesn't think it's important.

http://blog.wired.com/business/2008/10/now...

There is apparently not a single prominent person who supports John McCain’s technology policies and is confident enough to go out there and debate in favor of them.

As readers of this blog know, after publishing the Wired Scorecard a couple weeks ago, I’ve been wrangling with the McCain campaign, trying to get someone to defend his tech record and platform in a debate. There are enough Obama surrogates to fill the Queen Mary and the first one I called, former FCC chair Reed Hundt, was eager and willing to find a time.

...

Finally, the McCain camp offered economic adviser Douglas Holtz-Eakin. Excellent! We started planning and everything went well. Technology has been the ignored step-child of this campaign. No issue that matters more has been discussed less. The event sold out immediately.

Then, oops, yesterday morning, a couple hours before the event began, the McCain camp emailed to say that, actually, no, sorry, Holtz-Eakin can't make it for the 12:30 debate. Apparently he had very important meetings to attend. Right. Apparently, though, he stepped out in the middle. At 1pm he was on MSNBC attacking Obama, trying to tie him to George Bush's economic policies. Meanwhile, Reed Hundt ended up talking about complicated tech issues alone. The event was still fascinating (and you can see video here) but a huge opportunity was lost.

In short: the McCain camp chickened out. Spinning is easy; debating is hard. And defending John McCain’s record on broadband deployment, spectrum issues, and net neutrality is particularly hard. “If I was voting on technology issues only, even I wouldn’t support McCain,” said one Republican who I interviewed while researching the scorecard.


The freakin' debate was already scheduled and sold out, and McCain pulled out so his guy could do an MSNBC interview?!? Does this remind anyone of the Letterman incident? But of course, if a tree falls in geekworld and doesn't land on an M$M mouthpiece, you won't be hearing much about it now will you?
Discuss (11 comments) | Recommend (+16 votes)
Profile Information
MH1
Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your ignore list
9265 posts
Member since Sat Jun 4th 2005
Visitor Tools
Use the tools below to keep track of updates to this Journal.
 
Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals  |  Campaigns  |  Links  |  Store  |  Donate
About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy
Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.