Trump: “I like people who weren’t captured.” - McCain responds to Trump

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“I like people who weren’t captured.” - Trump, on McCain



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Video proof that Trump's 2016 campaign script, including bashing John McCain, was already written in 1999



August 7, 2018


It's not a new interview, exactly, since it was conducted in 1999 by Dan Rather, then with CBS News.

It's not exactly newsy, either, since Donald Trump doesn't say anything in the interview he hasn't said repeatedly since.

But it would certainly be right to say a newly surfaced nearly 13-minute "60 Minutes II" segment (remember that show?) proves the vast majority of Trump's political strategy, down to his exact criticism of John McCain, was very much formed nearly 20 years ago, back when he was selling a book, his name and a possible run for president.

He just broke the glass and went with it in 2016.
There are similar quotes, like those about McCain.
Trump '99 on John McCain: "Does being captured make you a hero? I don't know, I'm not sure."

Trump '15 on McCain: "He's not a war hero," said Trump. "He was a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren't captured."

The Trump/McCain feud has been one of the main storylines of Trump's time in office as McCain, though ailing in Arizona, has not been afraid to criticize Trump, particularly on foreign affairs, and also foiled his plan to repeal Obamacare.

Trump '99 on financing his campaign: "I'd be prepared to spend $100 million on the race if necessary."

Trump '16 on financing his campaign: "I will have over $100 million in the campaign, and I'm prepared to go much more than that."

He made the 2016 comment in October, not long before Election Day. He ended up spending less than $100 million, by the way.

There are similar cast members, including Melania Trump, who declines to humor Rather and criticize her now-husband. There's a shot of Trump consigliere Roger Stone, yes that Roger Stone, standing next to her at an appearance.

There are similar locations, including a walk through Mar-a-Lago.

There are boasts about crowd sizes and then a fact check of them by CBS, not completely unlike the ones that anger Trump to this day.

There's a lot of talk in the piece about how Trump could do well among blue-collar men — the very people who helped him take the Rust Belt from Democrats.

There's a hefty amount of media skepticism that he could be a serious candidate.


The list goes on.

But in addition to the many similarities, there's a lot that's not in the '99 video clip, including that Trump was talking about running on the Reform Party ticket, not the Republican one. There also was no talk of immigration, which was arguably his top issue in 2016.

That Trump had thought about running for president in the past isn't news. In 1999, contemporaneous to this CBS interview, he told Larry King on CNN he would form a presidential exploratory committee. He also teased campaigns on other shows, other networks, and in other presidential cycles. But watching that CBS clip in the context of how he eventually did run — and win — is quite interesting indeed.

© 2018 Cable News Network, Inc. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
 

QueEx

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White House asked Navy to hide USS John McCain during Trump's Japan visit

White House officials asked the Navy to make sure the USS John S. McCain was "out of sight" during President Trump's visit to Japan, according to an email reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. Navy officials, apparently taken aback by the request, first draped tarps were over the ship's name, then removed the tarps and moved a barge into place to obscure the name, the Journal reports. The ship's crew, whose uniforms say USS John McCain, was given the day off and not invited to Trump's speech Tuesday aboard the nearby USS Wasp. A senior White House official confirmed the request to The Washington Post, said the goal was to keep Trump from being upset, and said Trump was not involved in the planning.

Source: The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post
 
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