McCain Gives Mea Culpa in Memphis Over Vote Against King Holiday

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John McCain walks past a portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tenn., Friday. (AP Photo)

Forty years after Martin Luther King Jr.’s death, John McCain sought to make amends Friday for originally opposing the creation of a national holiday in honor of the civil rights leader.

In a driving rain, the presumptive Republican nominee stood on the Memphis balcony of Lorraine Motel, where King was assassinated, and told the gathered crowd he had made a “mistake.”

“We can be slow as well to give greatness its due, a mistake I myself made long ago … when I voted against a federal holiday in memory of Dr. King. I was wrong, I was wrong,” McCain said.

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee withstood jeers — and later criticism from the Democratic Party — for trying to take back his 25-year-old position on the holiday. He also received encouragement from someone in the crowd who said, “We all make mistakes. We all make mistakes.”

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference, founded by King, invited all the presidential candidates to attend its ceremonies Friday. Hillary Clinton didn’t attend but visited the Lorraine Motel later in the day. Barack Obama marked the anniversary at a campaign stop in Indiana.

McCain’s evolution from an opponent of the King holiday to a supporter took years.

“I’d remind you that … we can all be a little late sometimes in doing the right thing and Dr. King understood this about his fellow Americans,” McCain said Friday.

In his first term in the U.S. House of Representatives, McCain sided with the minority and opposed the 1983 law creating the national holiday, arguing there were enough federal holidays and that it would be too costly. In 1987 when the governor of Arizona rescinded the state’s King holiday, McCain called it the correct move. But then he reversed himself in 1989, as Arizona faced tourism boycotts.

A May 1989 edition of the Phoenix Gazette quoted him as saying: “I’m still opposed to another federal holiday … but I support the Arizona Martin Luther King holiday because of the enormous proportions this issue has taken on as far as the image of our state and our treatment towards not only blacks but all minorities.”

Arizona voters eventually approved a measure in 1992, making it the second to last state to recognize the holiday (before New Hampshire in 1999).

McCain said Monday he reversed his stance on the Arizona holiday because he “learned (King) was a transcendent figure in American history.”

He said he was “not proud” that Arizona was one of the last states to recognize the holiday.

But as late as 1994, McCain voted against federal funds for the MLK Federal Holiday Commission.

“It’s frankly disingenuous for John McCain to try and reinvent himself for the general election by distorting his record of opposing a holiday honoring Dr. King,” Democratic National spokeswoman Karen Finney said in a statement Friday. “John McCain should be honest about his full record of opposing the federal holiday, opposing a state holiday four years later, using divisive language to defend himself and voting to cut off funding for the commission working to promote the King holiday as recently as 1994.”

McCain also took heat for his short-lived support of South Carolina’s right to fly the confederate flag over the state house during the 2000 primary. Not until he was defeated for the nomination did he say that was not his true feeling but an act of political cowardice.

The Democratic candidates also honored King Friday.

Speaking in Memphis, Clinton appeared to get emotional when she talked about King’s death.

“I will never forget where I was when I heard Dr. King had been killed. I was a junior in college. And I remember hearing about it and feeling such despair,” she said, her voice dropping and quivering a bit. “I walked into my dorm room and took my book bag and hurled it across the room. It felt like everything had been shattered. Like we would never be able to put the pieces together again.”

FOX News’ Carl Cameron, Mosheh Oinounou and Aaron Bruns contributed to this report.

103 Responses to “McCain Gives Mea Culpa in Memphis Over Vote Against King Holiday”

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Comment by Azanda LaBoy-Vogt

John McCain, shame on you. Obviously you don’t believe in King’s dream… or that his legacy should have been honored in a federal holiday…and now that you are the presumptive nominee you try to pander, and “repent” for your discontent towards King’s dream at the place of his assassination. That’s disgusting John McCain. I’d have more respect for you if you would have abstained from comment…

 
Comment by Buddy

Give McCain a break. In the South MLK day is celebrated by some and the rest celebrate Robert E. Lee’s birthday.

 
Comment by pd sanouren

Is there no end to the media madness? Who freaking cares. Let’s start another worthless story and beat it to death. With everything going in the USA and the world will the media PLEASE try and focus on something that matters and maybe TRY something worthwhile and good?

 
Comment by troy

The nerve! Only Reverend Wright’s comments should be sugar coated by someone who is “re-inventing” himself each day. Watch the coverage the Democrats give this! You can lie, lie, lie but don’t you dare apologize for a mistake.

 
Comment by Brian Henry

Can someone confirm that Hilary actually was a junior in college and through her book bag? That was what 40 years ago? She couldn’t remember her arrival in Bosnia only 12 years ago as First Lady!

 
Comment by NOT VOTING FOR MCCAIN

Now, McCain is sorry he didnt vote for the King Holiday–Dr King, an American who sacrificed his life for racial and social injustice…this alarms me, how he can “quickly talk” about bombing Iraq, but yet “can’t quickly support a fellow American” who died trying to make life better for All Americans right here is this country…”WHERE WAS THE PATRIOTISM IN THIS???”

 
Comment by Capt Nemo

Well, it was funny till the bit about Hillarious Hillary at the end….choked…..oh poor dear….in a tantrum she throws her books across the room………..

 
Comment by S. Solomon

If we are unable to accept an apology or an admission of an “err”, how are we to expect to unite and bring together an entire nation?

I hope that Karen Finney will find it in her, to forgive her child, niece, nephew, etc., when they admit to their mistakes or unpopular opinions, someday.

 
Comment by Actions vs Words

It’s both unusual and refreshing to hear a politician say that he was wrong, but are a politician’s words ever true or honest?

Actions speak louder than words, and that politician’s record is clear.

Because people don’t change, one suspects that his only reason for eating crow is to become a more attractive presidential candidate.

Nevertheless, he may be the only candidate worth a vote in November.

 
Comment by David Johnson

I’d rather have someone as President who can learn and change as his life goes by, than someone who has been the same since the day they were born. McCain strikes me as such a person, and as someone who is up-front and honest. Clinton has changed her postition on issues too, which is fine. She fails, though, on the honesty front.

 

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