Cindy McCain

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Cindy McCain
Cindy McCain.jpg

Born May 20, 1954
Phoenix, Arizona
Political Party Republican
Spouse John McCain (died 2018)
Religion Baptist

Cindy Hensley McCain (born May 20, 1954 (age 69)) is the chair of Hensley & Co., which is one of the largest Anheuser-Busch beer distributors in the United States, owning 68% of the company. She founded the American Voluntary Medical Team which organized trips by medical personnel to disaster-struck or war-torn third-world areas. Cindy McCain is best known as the spouse of Arizona Senator and 2008 Presidential candidate John McCain. She first met McCain in April 1979 at a military reception in Hawaii. John McCain was serving as the U.S. Navy liaison officer to the United States Senate. They married May 17, 1980 at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix, and signed a prenuptial agreement and today keep their finances apart and file separate income tax returns. In 1989, she had suffered an addiction to opioid painkillers, which she initially took to alleviate pain following two spinal surgeries for ruptured discs. She took drug treatment and ended her addiction in 1992. When Cindy McCain was at Mother Teresa's orphanage in 1991 at Dhaka, Bangladesh, she met two infant girls, brought them home with her for medical treatment, and decided to adopt one of the girls named Bridget.

During the United States presidential election, 2000, Cindy McCain was chosen to serve as chair of the Arizona delegation for the Republican National Convention. In 2001, she became active in Operation Smile, a not-for-profit medical service, by joining ts board of directors, and traveling with them to Morocco, Vietnam, and India. Cindy McCain also sits on the board of directors for CARE and HALO Trust.[1] She suffered a stoke in April 2004. Although she mostly recovered, she still suffers from some short-term memory loss and difficulties in writing as a result. In February 2008, Cindy McCain criticized Michelle Obama, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Hussein Obama, for saying, "and let me tell you something: For the first time in my adult lifetime I am really proud of my country." McCain replied: "I am proud of my country. I don't know about you — if you heard those words earlier — I am very proud of my country."

Like her late husband, McCain currently is a RINO and anti-Trump; she announced in late September 2020 her endorsement of the racist, corrupt, and cognitively dysfunctional Joe Biden over President Trump over the 2020 presidential race[2] despite the former vice president having belittled her husband in 2008 as an "angry man".[3] Unsurprisingly, McCain has been accused of racism after "mistakenly" having once reported a human trafficking claim because she saw a toddler with a "woman of a different ethnicity".[4] She apparently had also unsuccessfully lobbied for a role in the State Department in 2017 to seek a position in the Trump Administration then.[5]

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