Politics | John McCain Saint John Still Tainted by Senate Murk Ethics crusader is still no stranger to lobbying culture By Kevin Spak Posted Mar 27, 2008 12:12 PM CDT Copied Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., addresses members and guests of the Los Angeles Worlds Affairs Council, Wednesday, March 26, 2008, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) With John McCain the presumptive Republican nominee, Democrats are rushing to expose chinks in the Arizona senator's saintly armor, Michael Scherer reports in Time. Though McCain talks tough about special interests, he has often appeared to have done their bidding. He once, for example, wrote a letter on behalf of a donor after a fundraiser on said donor’s yacht. DNC chief Howard Dean calls McCain a “situational ethicist” who “runs on integrity, but doesn’t seem to have any." McCain always counters by saying he has never betrayed the public trust, but even he admits that the Senate holds no saints. “All of us are tainted,” he said in 2002. “And I am one of them.” Read These Next Iran's leaders ditched their phones. Their bodyguards didn't. After rowing across Pacific, brothers want pizza and beer. This experimental private school uses AI to teach at a breakneck pace. Bobby Prevost's childhood home is a new pilgrimage site. Report an error