| 04/14/08
McCain says he supports bill to protect
identity of confidential news sources
By DAVID ESPO
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen. John McCain announced his support
Monday for legislation protecting the identity of confidential
news sources.
The Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting coupled his
announcement with a challenge to the media to acknowledge
its errors "beyond the small print on a corrections page."
Appearing at the annual meeting of The Associated Press, McCain
also said he believes the economy is in a recession, a statement
that Bush administration officials have declined to make.
"The important factor here is that Americans are hurting,"
he said.
In addition to a formal speech, McCain answered questions
in a more relaxed setting designed to duplicate the atmosphere
aboard his campaign's "Straight Talk Express," the
bus where he fields questions from reporters.
He fenced with two questioners about his thoughts on a running
mate, and responded with his trademark humor when asked about
the impact of his age on his chances for winning the White
House. "We outcampaign all of them," the 71-year-old
senator said, adding that if anyone doubts his energy, they
should "check with my 96-year-old mother."
McCain said his decision to support a reporters' shield law
was a close call.
"It is, frankly, a license to do harm, perhaps serious
harm. But it also is a license to do good; to disclose injustice
and unlawfulness and inequities; and to encourage their swift
correction," the Arizona senator said.
"I know that the press that disclosed security secrets
that should have remained so also revealed the disgrace of
Abu Ghraib, a disgrace that made it much harder to protect
the American people from harm," he added.
At the same time, he said, "There will be times, I suspect,
when I will wonder again if I should have supported this measure.
But I trust in your integrity and patriotism that those occasions
won't be so numerous that I will, in fact, deeply regret my
decision."
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