We remember Senator John McCain from Arizona and his service to the country. We also recap the headlines you might have missed this weekend and look ahead at what’s to come this week in political news.
Week in politics: Remembering Senator John McCain, plus Trump announces he’s ‘terminating’ NAFTA — can he do that?
Our weekly political roundtable recaps the headlines you might’ve missed this weekend and looks ahead to what’s to come this week in political news:
McCain remembrance and who takes his place in the Senate?
U.S. and Mexico reach prelim NAFTA deal
Recap of headlines from last week: Follow up to Cohen plea, maybe Manafort verdict as well, Reports: Trump Org. finance chief gets immunity, so does National Enquirer publisher
Trump, Sessions trade barbs over recusal from Mueller probe
Why Dems are talking more about missing Kavanaugh documents than abortion in SCOTUS battle
DNC changes rules for how superdelegates participate in nomination process
Trump delays SOS Pompeo’s visit to North Korea
A check-in on the charges against Duncan Hunter
Guests:
Matt Rodriguez, Democratic strategist and founder and chief executive officer of Rodriguez Strategies. He is also a former senior Obama advisor in 2008; he tweets
Carson Bruno, assistant dean and adjunct lecturer at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University and former research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University; he tweets
Maverick, straight-talker, patriot: Remembering the life, legacy and impact of John McCain on modern day politics
John McCain, US senator and former presidential candidate, died Saturday at his ranch in Arizona after battling brain cancer for more than a year.
He was 81. He had discontinued medical treatment, his family said Friday.
McCain was an outspoken voice on policy and politics to the end. He was a Vietnam prisoner of war camp and was later elected to the Senate from Arizona six times but twice thwarted in seeking the presidency.
McCain’s service to his country began more than six decades ago at the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis and will end there in a cemetery overlooking Maryland’s Severn River. In Washington, McCain will lie in state Friday in the Capitol Rotunda with a formal ceremony and time for the public to pay respects. On Saturday, former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama are expected to speak at a service at Washington National Cathedral.
We discuss his life and political impact.
With files from the Associated Press
Guests:
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), United States Senator for California; she tweets
Luige del Puerto, editor and associate publisher of the Arizona Capitol Times; he tweets
Doug Cole, Arizona political strategist and former Arizona communications director to Sen. McCain’s 2000 presidential campaign
Elaine S. Povich, author of “John McCain: American Maverick” (Sterling, May 2018) and “John McCain: A Biography” (Greenwood, February 2009); she is a staff writer for “Stateline,” a Pew Charitable Trusts publication providing daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy and an adjunct professor of journalism at the University of Maryland; she tweets
Bill Jones, former California Secretary of State and former Republican Assembly Minority Leader; he was John McCain’s campaign chair for California in 2008; he was also worked as one of the chairs on McCain’s 2000 campaign
Jon Talton, Arizona Republic columnist between 2000 and 2007, 4th generation Arizonan, longtime Arizona political observer, current columnist for The Seattle Times
Barbara Boxer, retired United States Senator for California from 1993 to 2017 and host of the podcast "Fight Back;" she tweets