“„:I came across these Arizona Republic articles from 1991. I’m curious if you recall this incident. Back in ‘91, McCain was just getting started with his anti-wasteful spending and earmark theme. He joined with 11 other senators and congressman to introduce legislation to rescind $1 billion in appropriations for earmarks that had not yet been spent in the 1991 budget. In that $1 billion, there were 325 projects that were being referred to, and three of them, McCain had supported. One of them, it appears he actually wrote a letter to Sen. Lautenberg, who was the chair of an appropriations subcommittee to get what appears to be an earmark for a road, the Turquoise Trail.
“„DeConcini:Oh, I know it well. I was there.
“„TWI:Can You describe what you remember about that incident?
“„**** I remember it so well because McCain took that one on himself. I supported it, but he was the leader of it, which I was delighted, because I was on the appropriations committee and I did a lot of earmarks for Arizona. He got Lautenberg to put that one in, really on his own, or whoever the ranking Republican was, who I can’t remember, on the committee at the time. That’s probably who did it for him. It was in there. I knew it was a request, but I had not taken it up to Lautenberg myself, although I do remember supporting it, either by letter or staff communication. So, when he got it in, it was quite frankly a relief to me, and I applauded it, that I didn’t have to carry that burden. Earmarks, they’re a lot of work. That’s heavy lifting. That’s why I contend that McCain is the anti-earmark guy, because he doesn’t want to do that heavy lifting. That’s what you have to do. It’s tough as hell.
“„TWI:Granted, McCain has a very solid record of not going after earmarks. On the stump, daily, he says he has never once requested a single earmark or pork-barrel project for his home state. How would you characterize that statement?
“„DeConcini:Well, the example you just gave, of course, is the answer to that. He has supported earmarks. He has a long history, now, of being opposed to them. It’s just a fact of life that he has done it. It’s like Gov. Paliln. She has supported the “Bridge to Nowhere.” So what? She changed her mind on it, and McCain changed his mind on earmarks. I disagree with him on that, but I respect his right to change his mind on it. I think, people ask me, and you’re not asking me, why he changed his mind - because he didn’t want to do the heavy lifting. He didn’t want to have to go there and ask people to do something, because they ask you to do something in return sometimes. Besides that, I was his senior colleague, and I’m doing all this and getting a lot of press on it. It’s not something he wants to get in that same pool with. That’s how I interpret it.