Here's Holly Bailey with the view on McCain from 35,000 feet.
John McCain’s campaign plane is
usually a pretty jovial place to be. The senator, his family and aides sit in
the first few rows, while the press is stationed in the back of the plane. On most days, the two sides openly mingle, with reporters sometimes able to sit
close so close to the front that they can hear McCain and his aides talking
strategy.
But in the aftermath of today’s New York Times story looking at
McCain’s dealings with a Washington lobbyist, the mood is decidedly
different. Before McCain boarded his plane, reporters were asked to sit farther
back than usual on the plane. And when McCain finally boarded the plane, he
failed to offer his usual wave at reporters and opted to quickly take his seat.
During the flight, the cabin was unusually quiet, save a few quick discussions
McCain had with top aides Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter. Near the end of the
flight, Schmidt came back to the press cabin, where, with cameras off, he railed
against the New York Times for publishing its story. “The Times in a post-Jayson
Blair, post-Judith Miller world… went through a painful period of
self-evaluation,” Schmidt said. “That went out the window yesterday with this
piece on John McCain...This is much more a story about journalism than a story
about John McCain.” When reminded that the Washington Post also published a
story today, Schmidt shrugged. “The Washington Post piled on (but) the
Washington Post didn’t instigate the story,” Schmidt said.
Is the Post getting a
pass? Schmidt says no, but there’s a reason that the McCain campaign is
targeting its ire solely at the Times: There’s no other paper more reviled on
the right than the Gray Lady. And the story has earned McCain a level of
sympathy from some of his toughest critics, including Sean Hannity and Rush
Limbaugh, both of whom have lambasted the paper for publishing its account on
McCain today.