How John McCain Turned His Clichés Into Meaning
By MARK LEIBOVICH
Published: December 18, 2013
When I walk into John McCains office a week before Thanksgiving, he is not at all happy and seems to be enjoying it quite a bit.
He is sampling none of the usual flavors of upset we tend to associate with the Arizona senator: not the McCain is bitter or get off my yard varieties, not even the deeply troubled umbrage that politicians of all stripes love to assume. Here is a man, instead, who is gleefully seizing an opportunity for outrage.
I am very angry, McCain says through a smiling grimace. He hands me a photocopied compilation of old quotes from the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, from back when Democrats were in the minority and Republicans were threatening to enact a rule the so-called nuclear option that would require only a 51-vote majority to confirm most presidential and judicial nominations. Turns out Reid believed this was a bad idea when the Republicans were in charge but was a good one now, and McCain is packing bullet points.
Im going to go kick the crap out of Harry Reid, he keeps announcing as we walk from his office to the Capitol. Once on the Senate floor, McCain approaches Reid, puts his hands on the majority leaders shoulders, smiles and says something I cant make out from the visitors gallery above. Reid smiles back, says a few words in reply and places his hands on McCains sides. It looks as if they are dancing.
full article
www.nytimes.com/2013/12/22/magazine/john-mccain.html