St Paul, Minnesota/Washington - US President George W Bush
called Republican presidential hopeful John McCain the candidate who
'understands the lessons' of the terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001, in an address by satellite to the Republican Party's nominating
convention on Tuesday.
Bush, whose low approval ratings have kept him from playing a
larger role in the McCain campaign to date, was originally to appear
in person Monday at the St Paul, Minnesota convention. He cancelled
the visit due to Hurricane Gustav's arrival on the Gulf Coast.
Bush characterized McCain as an independent thinker who is best
able to lead the country in a time of war, and touted McCain's
military history as a Vietnam War fighter pilot who was captured and
tortured for five years in a Hanoi prison.
'We live in a dangerous world. And we need a president who
understands the lessons of September 11, 2001: that to protect
America, we must stay on the offense, stop attacks before they
happen, and not wait to be hit again,' Bush said.
'I know the hard choices that fall solely to a president,' Bush
said. 'John McCain's life has prepared him to make those choices. He
is ready to lead this nation.'
Republicans have hammered Democratic presidential nominee Barack
Obama, who was elected to the Senate in 2004, for being unprepared to
lead the country. Bush made no specific references to Obama in his
speech.
The president's address came on the first full day of the
Republican convention, which had been drastically curtailed Monday
due to the onset of Hurricane Gustav.
Bush headlined a convention night that included independent
Senator Joe Lieberman, a one-time Democratic vice presidential
candidate, and actor and former presidential candidate Fred Thompson.
Lieberman, who has been one of McCain's strongest supporters, made
a direct plea to Democratic and independent-minded voters, touting
McCain's reputation as an independent and arguing that he was in fact
better able to bring change to Washington than Obama.
'I'm here tonight for a simple reason: John McCain is the best
choice to bring our country together and lead America forward,' said
Lieberman, who was Al Gore's running mate in 2000.
With Bush's approval ratings hovering below 30 per cent, the
McCain campaign has been keeping the president at arms-length in the
race. McCain, 72, has appeared publicly with Bush only once - at a
private fundraiser - since the president endorsed him in March.
Democrats used their own convention last week in Denver, Colorado,
to link McCain's policies to those of the Bush presidency, arguing
that McCain simply brings 'more of the same.'
'The man George Bush needs may be John McCain, but the change
America needs is Barack Obama,' Obama campaign manager David Plouffe
said in a statement Tuesday.
The McCain campaign has highlighted their candidate's long-held
reputation as a maverick unafraid to go against his own party, and
Bush alluded to that track record in his speech.
'John is an independent man who thinks for himself. He's not
afraid to tell you when he disagrees - believe me, I know,' quipped
Bush, who has tussled with McCain on issues including torture and
global warming.
While Bush was unable to attend, his father and former president
George HW Bush received a long standing ovation as he entered the
convention hall with his wife, Barbara.
The former president did not address the convention, but the party
did run a video tribute of Bush, as well as of former Republican
presidents and icons Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald
Reagan.
McCain will accept the Republican Party's nomination on Thursday.
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