Read the complete transcript of McCain's interview on Face the Nation. Excerpt below:
SCHIEFFER: So you want to see more detail. How do you think President Obama is doing so far?
MCCAIN: I think he’s done well. I think he has been -- If you want to look at a legislative scorecard, he has achieved literally every one of his legislative accomplishments. Unfortunately, it’s by picking off a couple of Republicans. It’s not been bipartisan.
So there really hasn’t been that change in the climate in Washington. But elections have consequences. On the issue of national security, I think the president is facing a major challenge here, North Korea and others. And it’s sort of an incomplete. Health care is another major challenge.
SCHIEFFER: What about health care?
MCCAIN: I’m on the health committee. We have been having these endless conversations and some amendments without two major portions of the bill -- with two major portions of the bill being blank. I’ve never seen anything like it since I’ve been in the Senate.
One on whether there will be government plan and whether employers will have to provide -- will be required to provide insurance to their employees. I mean, those are two major fundamental problems with the issue. The Finance Committee, the other committee as you know, has now said that they won’t come to a decision on how you pay for it until after the election. A real devastating blow to their plans was a Congressional Budget Office report last week that said the present plan -- the one we’re considering in the health committee -- would only ensure one-third of the uninsured and would cost $1 trillion.
On Iran:
What does the United States do then?
MCCAIN: Well, I think we’re faced with the same dilemma that we were during the Cold War, throughout centuries. If I could -- very briefly, Daniel Webster, one of the great senators in history, spoke about the Greek revolution in 1823.
MCCAIN: And he said when he was responding to people that said that mere rhetorical support would do no good, and I quote him, he said “I hope it may. It may give them courage in spirit. It may assure them of public regard, teach them that they’re not wholly forgotten by the civilized world, and inspire them with constancy in the pursuit of their great end.” And then he said, “whether it helped or not,” he said, “it was due to our character and called for by our own duty.”
Daniel Webster was right then. Ronald Reagan was right. Harry Truman was right. Scoop Jackson was right. Jack Kennedy was right when he said we’ll go anywhere and bear any burden.
The fact is that America has been and will be the beacon of hope and freedom. And we are not saying that the people who are now risking their lives and some giving them in the streets in cities -- of cities and towns in Iran, but we are saying we’re on their side as they seek freedom.
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