|
I
first met John McCain in 1999 when I was a graduate student.
He was coming to speak on my campus and I was selected to
pick him up at Logan Airport. On the 45-minute ride to
Harvard Square, we talked about many issues of the day and
also about India and the Indian-American community. He told
me about his trips to India and his wife's tireless
charitable work in the region - which led to the adoption of
their daughter from Bangladesh. He also told me how he wants
to help encourage the entrepreneurial spirit which brought
our families to America - whether they are businessmen,
physicians, engineers, or laborers - he understood the guts
it took to come to this country and stake a claim here. He
said he was running for president to make sure the U.S.
government encourages that spirit as much as possible - and
does not discourage that spirit - because that is America's
greatest strength.
By
the time we got to campus, I didn't need to hear his
remarks. I signed up to volunteer for his campaign the
next day and later was hired on his Advance team as he
campaigned against George W. Bush until he conceded after
Super Tuesday. He lost that Republican primary contest
because he said and did things that right-wing
Republicans disliked. Yet, even on Election Day that year,
exit polls showed that if he was on the ballot, alongside
Bush and Gore, he would have won…
Eight
years later, many things have changed in the world. But, to
me, the important, "presidential" strengths of
John McCain have not changed.
He is still
the most bipartisan Senator and continues to work with both
parties in Congress and with the White House to get things
done. He has more friends of the opposite party than anyone
else in the Senate - that is important because all difficult
legislation dies in the Senate (where a 60% margin is needed
for tough bills) and ONLY a president with friends of the
opposite party will be able to get things done.

John McCain
is still willing to buck his own party when he believes they
are incorrect. He has done it on campaign finance reform,
immigration reform, and environmental reform. This time, he
is the presidential nominee and is in the position of
reforming the Republican party itself.
His
willingness to disagree with his party and think for himself
makes him unpopular with entrenched special interests, but,
he believes it is far more important to do what he believes
is right for the American people, and hopefully be respected
for it.
It is true
that he is not as popular or exciting as his opponent, who
has never really shown the courage to stand up to his party.
It is true that John McCain does not have the support of
Hollywood's Indian-American stars like Kal Penn and Mira
Nair. But that does not mean that he is not the best
candidate for Indian-Americans to support.
John McCain
has been a strong and consistent friend of India and the
Indian-American community. He knows and understands India's
importance and he is the most prominent proponent of India
joining the G-8" group of industrialized nations. He
has always been a strong advocate of the U.S.-India civil
nuclear agreement, which would expand America's energy
commerce and also help India with its lack of clean energy
sources. The Financial Times recently interviewed several
leading Indian scholars who all agreed that a McCain
presidency would better for U.S.-India relations. John
McCain also supports comprehensive immigration
reform, fixing our healthcare system without creating more
federal bureaucracy for doctors and patients, and keeping
taxes and government regulation low so that our
entrepreneurs and small-businesspeople can continue to
innovate, compete, and create jobs and valuable products and
services. All these policies are particularly helpful to
Indian-Americans.
Barack
Obama's commitment to our community, however, is highly
questionable. In the Senate, he voted for an amendment
to the U.S.-India civil nuclear bill that would have
effectively killed the deal by making it impossible to pass
in India. Thankfully there were many Senators of both
parties who opposed Obama's efforts, and his "poison
pill" amendment did not pass. "Most Democrats
came out and supported the deal. But Obama stood up and went
after India," said C. Raja Mohan, one of the scholars
in the Financial Times piece. While McCain has taken the
opportunity to push hesitant members of Congress to support
the deal, Obama refuses to do so.
But even more
worrisome, during the primary, the Obama campaign prepared a
shameful memo that attacked Hillary Clinton for having
strong support from the Indian- American community. The memo
mockingly labeled her the "Senator from Punjab"
and criticized her work with Indian-Americans and with
India. It also negatively portrayed trade with India and
those hardworking Indian-American businesspeople who do
tremendously valuable work with India - making both
countries better off.
While
Senator Obama has tried to distance himself from these
comments, those who wrote the memo were never dismissed -
and could end up in his potential Administration. For
Indian-Americans, that potential scenario should be a
deal-breaker! This is particularly the case when we
have, in John McCain, a proven, tested, experienced leader
who is a longstanding friend of India and Indian-Americans.
John McCain's
choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate should also be
encouraging to our community. As one of her first actions as
Governor of Alaska, she appointed an Indian-American to her
cabinet - Anand Dubey as Chief Information Officer. That she
did this in a state with very few Indian-Americans is
particularly noteworthy.
I hope my
fellow Indian-Americans will visit www.IndiansForMcCain.com
to learn more and believe that once they consider all these
points, will realize that while Barack Obama is flashy, his
support is uncertain, whereas they have a sure-fire
supporter in John McCain - he should be their choice.
Kishan Kumar
Putta is a co-founder of Indians for McCain:
www.IndiansForMcCain.com, ifm@IndiansForMcCain.com. He can
be reached at kishanputta@gmail.com. Kishore Thota
also contributed to this piece.
|