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		 Senator 
		John McCain to seek sixth term in Arizona 
		
		 
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		[April 08, 2015] 
		By Steve Holland 
		  
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator John 
		McCain of Arizona, declaring "I've got a lot of energy left in me," 
		announced plans on Tuesday to seek a sixth term in office in 2016. 
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			 McCain, the Republican presidential nominee in 2008 and now the 
			powerful chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, vowed to 
			face down any challenger. 
			 
			He had defeated a strong challenge from a tea party conservative 
			candidate in 2010 in the Republican primary election and coasted to 
			re-election over a Democratic opponent. 
			 
			"I think you have to be prepared for any challenge," he told Reuters 
			in a telephone interview from Arizona. "I'll be ready for anything, 
			both right, left and Democrat as well." 
			 
			McCain, the senior senator in the Republican-dominated southwestern 
			state, formally announced his long-expected plans at an Arizona 
			Chamber of Commerce & Industry event in Phoenix. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			The 78-year-old McCain, who was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 
			1986, said he is ready to combat tough foreign and domestic 
			challenges. 
			 
			"No success in my life has ever come without a good fight, and there 
			is so much worth fighting for today," he told an enthusiastic crowd. 
			"I'm eager to get started and ready for whatever comes." 
			 
			Speaking to Reuters, McCain said the twin threats of Iran and 
			Islamic State militants represent the biggest national security 
			challenges to the United States. He disagreed with President Barack 
			Obama's handling of both threats, saying the president has been 
			"leading from behind."Saying the world is in the worst turmoil since 
			the end of World War Two, McCain declared: "I've got a lot of energy 
			left in me to try to address this great challenge to our nation and 
			its security." 
			 
			
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			He said a top priority for him on the Senate Armed Services 
			Committee is to lift so-called budget sequestration policies that 
			have capped military spending. 
			 
			The Vietnam War veteran, who was a prisoner of war, has been a 
			prominent voice on foreign policy issues. In 2008, he ran for the 
			White House unsuccessfully against Democratic U.S. Senator Barack 
			Obama. 
			 
			The Republican senator has been known for his willingness at times 
			to work across party lines. 
			 
			Last year, at a meeting of the Arizona Republican Party, a 
			resolution passed by a voice vote that censured McCain for what his 
			critics called his overly liberal record. It was a sign of continued 
			distrust of him by some conservatives in the state. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix and Curtis 
			Skinner in San Francisco; editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, Sandra Maler 
			and Bernard Orr) 
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			reserved.] 
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