US senator John McCain who died on Saturday August 25, 2018 following a
battle with brain cancer. He was 81. PHOTO | ELVIS BARUKCIC | AFP
US senator John McCain, a celebrated war hero known for reaching
across the aisle in an increasingly divided America, died Saturday
following a battle with brain cancer. He was 81.
"Senator
John Sidney McCain III died at 4.28pm on August 25, 2018. With the
senator when he passed were his wife Cindy and their family," his office
said in a statement.
"At his death, he had served the United States of America faithfully for 60 years."
"Sen
McCain, thank you for your service," read a sign near the driveway of
his home in a rural part of Sedona, Arizona, television footage showed,
as a police escort accompanied the hearse that was to carry his body and
local residents came bearing flowers for the late political titan.
While
he had many disagreements with fellow politicians, the Republican
stalwart's integrity was not at question, and condolences came swift
from the highest reaches of American politics after his passing.
OBAMA MOURNS
Former
US president Barack Obama, the Democrat to whom McCain lost the
presidency in the 2008 elections, said "we are all in his debt."
"John
McCain and I were members of different generations, came from
completely different backgrounds and competed at the highest level of
politics," Obama said in a statement.
"But we shared,
for all our differences, a fidelity to something higher -- the ideals
for which generations of Americans and immigrants alike have fought,
marched and sacrificed."
Former vice president Al Gore
-- who served under Democrat Bill Clinton – said "I always admired and
respected John from the opposite side of the aisle, because he thrived
under pressure, and would work to find common ground, no matter how
hard."
TRUMP
President Donald Trump, who once mocked McCain's war record, said he sent his "deepest sympathies and respect."
McCain
had been a rare and outspoken Republican critic of Trump, accusing him
of "naivete," "egotism" and of sympathising with autocrats.
On
Capitol Hill, McCain became close friends with Senator Lindsey Graham
and former senator Joe Lieberman – a trio dubbed the "Three Amigos."
Now
that the trio is missing its driving force, Graham wrote that "America
and Freedom have lost one of her greatest champions... And I've lost one
of my dearest friends and mentor."
McCain, who was
tortured during his five years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, stopped
treatment from an aggressive form of cancer earlier this week, his
family saying "the progress of disease and the inexorable advance of age
render their verdict."
He had spent more than three
decades in the Senate, looming large in debates over war and peace and
the moral direction of the nation. Before joining the upper chamber, he
served as a US representative from 1983 to 1987.
McCain
had not been on the Senate floor in months, remaining at his Arizona
home for treatment of glioblastoma -- the same form of brain cancer that
took the life of another Senate giant, Democrat Ted Kennedy, in 2009.
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