Republican presidential candidate John McCain came to Minnesota Thursday seeking two goals he is urgently pursuing from coast to coast this summer -- the support of crucial independent voters and campaign cash from deep-pocketed GOP donors.
McCain left to continue those quests elsewhere today, having delivered his self-styled straight talk on a wide range of issues while giving carefully nuanced non-answers to repeated queries about Gov. Tim Pawlenty's future role in his campaign.
Repeating his newly-minted campaign slogan -- "reform, prosperity and peace" -- at a town hall meeting in St. Paul, McCain said: "We need to clean up our act -- reform Social Security and eliminate wasteful pork-barrel spending. As president of the United States, I will veto every earmark bill that crosses my desk."
McCain was introduced by Pawlenty, who called the candidate "a straight talker, a populist who calls it as he sees it."
McCain quickly lived up to that billing by opening the session with a roundhouse punch at Barack Obama, his Democratic opponent, for Obama's decision to opt out of the public financing system for presidential campaigns.
"Whenever you go back on your word to the American people," McCain said, referring to an earlier Obama promise to accept public financing and spending limits if his opponent did, "it erodes the trust they have in all of us."
Questions ranged from energy policy to education to immigration -- a sensitive issue on which McCain has alienated much of the Republican base.
After securing the nation's borders ("America wants that done first, and I understand that"), McCain said he is "convinced we need a temporary-worker program that works. ... " As for immigrants "who are here already, we have to remember they're also God's children" who have to be dealt with "in a compassionate fashion."