Politics 2008: Candidates commemorate 9/11
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AP Photo | Timothy A. Clary, Pool Presidential candidates Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., left, and Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., toss flowers into the reflecting pool at ground zero Thursday to commemorate the seventh anniversary of the 2001 terrorist attacks in New York. |
Published: Thursday, September 11, 2008 8:05 PM MST
NEW YORK (AP)—Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama made ground zero their common ground for one rare day, free of politics and infused with memory.
Putting their partisan contest on a respectful hold, they walked together Thursday into the great pit where the World Trade Center once stood and, as one, honored the dead from the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
They walked down a long ramp flanked with the flags of countries, chatting at times, silent other times, and sharing a quick laugh at one point. Right behind them, Cindy McCain clutched Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s arm, Michelle Obama was with her daughters in Chicago.
At the bottom of the ramp, the two rivals stopped to talk with a small group of family members of the attacks’ victims of seven years ago. They laid flowers at the pit’s commemorative reflecting pool, a pink rose from Obama, a yellow rose from McCain, bowed their heads and walked off to speak with fire and police personnel. There were no speeches.
“Thanks, we’ll see ya,” McCain told Obama as the Democrat patted the Republican’s back and they shook hands and parted.
Earlier, McCain spoke briefly at a simple ceremony in remote, rural Shanksville, Pa., held on a large hilly field close to where United Airlines Flight 93, the third of four airliners commandeered by terrorists, crashed. Investigators believe some of the 40 passengers and crew rushed the cockpit and thwarted terrorists’ plans to use that plane as a weapon like the ones that hit the World Trade Center and Pentagon. All aboard all planes died.
The Arizona senator said those on the flight might have saved his own life, as some believe the terrorists wanted to slam that plane into the U.S. Capitol. He said the only way to thank those who died on the flight is to “be as good an American as they were.”
“We might fall well short of their standard, but there’s honor in the effort,” McCain said.
Obama, in a statement, said that on Sept. 11, 2001, “Americans across our great country came together to stand with the families of the victims, to donate blood, to give to charity, and to say a prayer for our country. Let us renew that.”
The Illinois senator added: “Let us remember that the terrorists responsible for 9/11 are still at large, and must be brought to justice.”
A joint statement issued Thursday from U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and Sen, Tim Bee:
Today we stand together, with all Southern Arizonans, in solemn remembrance of the thousands of Americans who lost their lives during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11th, 2001.
The past seven years have not diminished the painful memories of that tragic day in our nation’s history. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims’ families -— their losses are ours as well. We also give thanks to the first responders from Arizona who volunteered their time and service to travel far from home to respond to the needs of their fellow Americans.
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