A disclaimer before we start -- the erratic nature of senate scheduling and the rigors of modern campaigning make it quite usual for presidential candidates to miss a fair number of votes.
Now on to the main story, John McCain missed 63.8% of the votes in the 110th Congress. He leads the pack in the Senate, beating out both Clinton and Obama even though they had a much longer primary season. McCain also missed more votes than South Dakota Sen. Tim Johnson, who suffered from a stroke and underwent a lengthy recovery!
Obama missed 45.5% of the votes and Clinton 32.3% of the votes.
Daniel De Groot compiles a neat summary of the key votes missed by McCain. You can make up your mind about whether any of those matter to you as a voter, but feel free to add in a healthy dose of skepticism when McCain rails about the partisanship in Congress, or about his ability to make decisions that put the country first, without regard to political costs.
For a more partisan spin on the matter, see Barbara Boxer's press release.
In interest of fairness I also compared McCain’s percentage of missed votes to John Kerry’s. Kerry missed 72% of the votes when he was running against Bush. Keep in mind that Kerry was running against an incumbent, who can make appearances at various places on the tax-payer's dime, ostensibly on non-campaign related issues. Also, there is one more session for the current Congress, so there is a chance that McCain will match Kerry's record.
Sunday, September 7, 2008
McCain's Missed Votes
Labels:
Barbara Boxer,
Hillary Clinton,
John Kerry,
John McCain,
Missed Votes,
Obama
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Eek -- just read the De Groot summary of missed votes -- apparently McCain doesn't care much for energy independence.
And Barbara Boxer's "letter" is just amazing. Thanks for providing these links:-)
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