Saturday, March 15, 2008 - Page updated at 09:10 AM
McCain Travels Amtrak Like Everyone Else
Associated Press Writer
John McCain traveled like a man of the people Friday morning, riding an Amtrak train to Philadelphia after a late night of voting in Washington.
"Nice to see you, nice to see you," McCain said to workers and passengers who greeted him on the 8 a.m. high-speed Acela Express train.
McCain, accompanied by a campaign aide, was left alone by the public as he sat in the first-class car for much of the 1 1/2 hour trip.
He drank coffee and read several newspapers _ The Washington Post, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and USA Today. And he talked on his cell phone with a campaign adviser for several minutes.
The night before, the Arizona senator had flown from Philadelphia to the nation's capital for votes on the federal budget.
As Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting, McCain had a campaign charter plane at his disposal.
But he took a commercial flight so that he could fly into Washington Reagan National Airport, nearer the Capitol, and he returned to Philadelphia by train.
In Washington, McCain tried but failed to attract support for a halt to pork-barrel spending, a moratorium on so-called "earmarks" sought by GOP conservatives to restore the party's credibility with voters.
His effort lost on a 71-29 vote, but McCain attracted support from the two Democratic presidential candidates, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.
McCain told reporters Friday morning the process was a "charade" that deserved more deliberation.
Later in Springfield, Penn., McCain told voters: "We were voting on major issues of profound consequences with no discussion, no debate and 10 minutes to vote.
"Anyone who had the misfortune of watching it will know how hard it is to do the Lord's work in the city of Satan," said McCain, who has served four-terms in the Senate.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Others states' fights bring focus to Daniels
NEW - 07:13 AM
South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is writing memoir
Bill would make jail mug shots available
Immigration, license bill voted down in state Senate
Rival Texas bills require sonograms before abortions

The engineers who create gallon-squeezing cars like the Toyota Prius use every available method to comply with the ever-tightening fuel-economy standa...
Post a comment
- Former Quellos CEO, partner sentenced to prison for illegal tax scheme
- Quellos is selling unit to BlackRock in $1.72 billion deal
- In Person: Manure entrepreneur Kevin Maas turns dairy waste into green energy
- Go With The Glow | Taste
- Recipe: Apple and Pear Galette
- Fingerprint reveals Leonardo da Vinci as creator of $150 million artwork
- 42 years later, the memories of a high-school basketball championship live on | Steve Kelley
- Washington volleyball coach Jim McLaughlin keeps the focus simple: Improvement | Jerry Brewer
- Lazy columnist syndrome | Syndicated columnist
- Probe of Sheriff's Office possible, oversight director says
- Most Americans hate their jobs or have 'checked out,' Gallup says
- It’s curtains for Seattle’s Egyptian Theatre
- ‘I don’t want to be only person cured of HIV’
- Fasting woman to end attempt to ‘live on light’
- One tough old bird rules the parking lot
- 2 charged with stealing 4.3 miles of copper wire from Sound Transit
- Foodie secrets of Florida’s ‘Redneck Riviera’ are worth the quest
- Mastros defend their actions, plan to ‘retire in peace’
- Ride-share cars: illegal, and all over Seattle
- Report: Too many teachers, too little quality






