Video Tour of John McCain's 10 Mansions
"You get John McCain in the White House and I do believe we will be at war with Iran. That's one of the things that makes me very nervous about him. ... There's no doubt John McCain is going to be a war president. Can anybody see John McCain as a peacetime president? It's preposterous. ... He's in Putin's face. He's threatening the Iranians. "We're going to be in Iraq a hundred years." ... John McCain is a bellicose, red-faced, angry guy who constantly explodes."
*** Conservative pundit Pat Buchanan
That's right 10 homes/mansions that Johnny boy lives the life of luxury in, while a lot of Americans are having trouble keeping ONE roof over their heads.
We worry about having enough money to buy gas for the old clunker, while Johnny Boy flies around in a private jet. Having trouble buying new shoes for the kids?
Johnny Boy relaxes in custom made $520 dollar Italian loafers.
Yep, times sure is tough for Johnny Boy.
The Real Elitist: Video of McCain's Collection of Mansions Reveal He's Not Your Average Joe
The A.F.L.-C.I.O. and the Service Employees International Union have feuded plenty in recent years, but they have banded together to help distribute and publicize a new online video that characterizes Senator John McCain as elitist and out of touch.
The four-minute video, produced by Robert Greenwald of Brave New Films, is called "McCain's Mansions: the Real Elitist" and showcases various McCain homes and condominiums in Arizona, California and Virginia, with one valued at $4.66 million.
While highlighting the wealth of Mr. McCain and his wife, Cindy - the video also includes a cable news clip poking fun at Mr. McCain's $520 calfskin loafers made by Salvatore Ferragamo - the video also focuses on the tale of Eileen Gillis, described as a systems engineer and sales clerk whose house in Connecticut was foreclosed upon.
Mr. Greenwald's company, Brave New Films, which has made films castigating Wal-Mart and Fox News, said that it planned, with the help of the A.F.L.-C.I.O and service employees, to distribute McCain's Mansions to more than 500,000 voters. It offers the effort as a sort-of-chain Web video, imploring viewers and supporters to send it along to five friends.
(We have asked the McCain campaign for comment on the new video and its claims.)
Update: Alex Conant, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee responded: "Considering Barack Obama lives in a multi-million dollar house bought with the help of his buddy, Tony Rezko, who is now a convicted felon, it's odd that Obama's supporters would choose to make the candidates' homes an issue."
The video shows Mr. McCain praising 51 million homeowners for skipping vacations, taking a second job or managing their budgets to make their mortgage payments on time. But then the video shows Ms. Gillis saying that she and her husband took second jobs in retailing, but were still unable to avoid foreclosure. She said the choice came down to putting food on the table or paying their monthly mortgage. (Her first mortgage was from the troubled Countrywide lender, according to public records.)
The A.F.L.-C.I.O and the service employees are helping distribute the video to union members partly because they see many workers sympathizing with Mr. McCain as a war hero. These labor groups want to make the case that Barack Obama, far more than John McCain, is in tune with the nation's workers.
In its effort to portray Mr. McCain as elitist, McCain's Mansions shows his wife explaining why she bought a private jet. "My husband was running for the Senate in Arizona," she said. "And in Arizona the only way to get around the state is by small private plane and I wound up loving it and buying a plane."




Good for him is all that I can say, he earned his homes.