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		Former Vice President Biden salutes 
		McCain as 'a brother' 
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		 [August 31, 2018] 
		By Katherine Davis-Young 
 PHOENIX (Reuters) - The late Republican 
		U.S. Senator John McCain was eulogized from across America's political 
		divide on Thursday by Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden, who 
		hailed his longtime Senate colleague as a "brother" and beacon of 
		bipartisanship.
 
 Biden paid tribute to the two-time Republican presidential candidate, 
		who died on Saturday from brain cancer at age 81, during a 90-minute 
		memorial service at North Phoenix Baptist Church, the latest in a string 
		of commemorative salutes to the Vietnam War hero and venerable 
		politician.
 
 Biden, 75, credited McCain with reflecting core values, sometimes frayed 
		in the growing rancor of the nation's politics, that everyday Americans 
		wanted to believe about themselves.
 
 "They knew that John believed so deeply and so passionately in the soul 
		of America that it made it easier for them to have confidence and faith 
		in America," Biden said.
 
		 
		He also recalled McCain as a man who could be cantankerous and stubborn 
		but treated political opponents, including Democrats, with mutual 
		respect while cherishing friendships struck up with those with whom he 
		differed.
 Biden, 75, first met McCain in the 1970s when McCain was a Navy Senate 
		liaison. Biden said their close personal bond abided even when the 
		senator from Delaware was chosen as the running mate for McCain's 
		Democratic rival in the 2008 presidential race, Barack Obama, who 
		defeated McCain.
 
 "I always thought of a John as a brother. We had a hell of a lot of 
		family fights," Biden said to laughter from the 3,500 or so mourners 
		packing the auditorium.
 
 Biden also invoked the 2015 death of his own son, Beau, from brain 
		cancer, and that of his first wife and infant daughter in a 1972 auto 
		accident, in offering words of sympathy to McCain's loved ones.
 
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			Former Vice President Joe Biden gives a tribute during a memorial 
			service for Senator John McCain at North Phoenix Baptist Church, 
			Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., August 30, 2018. Matt York/Pool via REUTERS 
            
 
            At the service's end, McCain's coffin was borne out of the church to 
			a recording of Frank Sinatra's "My Way." It was then taken to the 
			airport for a flight to Washington, McCain's last from Arizona.
 The memorial came a day after thousands of admirers waited in line 
			for hours in the blazing Arizona sun and triple-digit heat to pay 
			final respects as McCain's flag-draped coffin lay in state in the 
			Arizona Capital rotunda.
 
 The onetime Navy fighter pilot endured 5-1/2 years as a prisoner of 
			war in Vietnam after his aircraft was shot down over Hanoi. He went 
			on to a celebrated career on Capitol Hill, earning a reputation as a 
			political maverick who prided himself on working across party lines 
			on issues such as immigration, climate change and campaign finance 
			reform.
 
 As the Senate Armed Services Committee's chairman, he also became a 
			leading voice on defense.
 
 McCain stood out during the last two years of his life as a leading 
			Republican critic of U.S. President Donald Trump, a fellow 
			Republican whom McCain's family has asked not to attend his funeral 
			on Saturday at Washington's National Cathedral.
 
 (Additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles and Brian 
			Snyder in Phoenix; writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Frances 
			Kerry, Cynthia Osterman and Michael Perry)
 
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