Former vice president Joseph R. Biden and NFL star
Larry Fitzgerald hailed the late senator
John McCain as an authentic American hero with a mix of tears and humor at a memorial service Thursday.
Biden and Fitzgerald headed a lineup of a half-dozen speakers at the memorial service at North Phoenix Baptist Church, which marked the second of five days of events celebrating the life of McCain, who died of brain cancer Saturday at age 81. The ceremony was attended by more than two-dozen of the Arizona Republican’s current and former Senate colleagues as well as former vice president Dan Quayle.
In what appeared to be a veiled swipe at President Trump, Biden said some believed McCain lived by “an ancient, antiquated code where honor, courage, character, integrity and duty mattered.”
“But the truth is, John’s code was ageless — is ageless,” Biden said. McCain’s code, he added, was “grounded in respect for decency and basic fairness and intolerance for the abuse of power.”
Biden and McCain served together in the Senate for more than two decades. The two foreign policy giants famously tangled on some of the most pressing national security issues. Yet their close friendship transcended their policy differences. Earlier this week, longtime McCain adviser Rick Davis said Biden is “basically being treated as a member of the family, which of course the family believes he is.”
Biden introduced himself simply as he took the stage and spoke for a half-hour. “My name is
Joe Biden. I’m a Democrat. And I love John McCain,” he said, drawing laughs from the crowd.
He spoke emotionally of the “relentless” and “unforgiving” brain cancer that took the life of McCain as well as of Biden’s own son, Beau, and of the late senator Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.).
“It takes so much from those we love and from the families who love them that in order to survive we have to remember how they lived, not how they died,” Biden said.
He told the crowd to “find your image of John and remember it,” whether it was the senator’s laugh or the look of joy on his face when he was about to “go to the floor of the Senate and start a fight.”
As he spoke about their shared outrage at the demise of bipartisanship in the Senate, Biden looked to his left and spoke directly to the current senators in attendance, delivering an impromptu lecture about the state of today’s Senate. “We both lamented watching it change,” he said.
Fitzgerald, who visited McCain’s former jail cell and the site where he was shot down in Vietnam, described the senator as someone who “celebrated differences” and who cared about “the substance of my heart, more so than where I came from.”
“I’m black; he was white. I’m young; he wasn’t so young. He lived with physical limitations brought on by war; I’m a professional athlete. He ran for president; I ran out of bounds. He was the epitome of toughness, and I do everything I can to avoid contact,” Fitzgerald said.
“While from very different worlds, we developed a meaningful friendship,” he added.
On Friday, McCain’s body will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol Rotunda. A memorial service will be conducted Saturday at Washington National Cathedral, where former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush are among the expected speakers. McCain will be buried Sunday in a private funeral at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis.
Among the speakers on Thursday was Grant Woods, McCain’s former chief of staff, who retold one of the earliest anecdotes from the epic that was the senator’s life. It was about a prison guard in Vietnam who showed McCain unexpected kindness by loosening the painful ropes around his wrists and, much later in his imprisonment, drawing a cross in the dirt for him as a sort of Christmas gift.
He told other stories, too — about McCain, the bad driver, and McCain, the politician who knew how to apologize when he screwed up.
Woods concluded with an appeal to everyone in the room, and probably the country.
“In the end, this Republican, Democrat thing is not important,” he said. “We’re all Americans. John McCain believed in our Constitution. He would not stand by as people tried to trample it.”
“He kept the faith,” Woods concluded, and drew a cross on the stage with his shoe.
Ahead of the service Thursday morning, the line for people with tickets to sit in the public section wrapped halfway around the block-sized church. Almost everyone was dressed in their finest — suits, ties, dresses.
James Conklin, 70, was no different, except for his “veteran” ball cap and two medals from his Vietnam War service pinned to his black suit jacket. “I know what he went through,” Conklin said of the Arizona senator.
Conklin was a consistent McCain voter — for senator and president. He said he respects Biden, too, and is glad there will be a bipartisan display among the senators on the guest list. “I think we need to see more of it, but it will be great to see it today,” he said.
Half a block behind him in line, Tri Le and his wife, Helene Nguyen, waited with their own tickets. They had come from Mesa, Ariz., for the service, and moved from Vietnam a year ago. Le said they came seeking asylum, as he was a Christian pastor in Vietnam and had been arrested for practicing his faith.
Le was a child in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and only vaguely knew of stories about the famous American, captured by communists, who “loved his friends and refused to be released” until they were.
“I don’t talk about the bad side of the war,” Le said. “I love Americans. I love people who love Americans.” And so, he came to church.