BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said on Wednesday he’s likely to make another major speech at the Republican National Convention later this year, as he did in 2004, and that he’s going to join his buddy John McCain on the campaign trail later this year.
The governor spoke of his plans during a lunch session for participants at the Milken Institute Global Conference on the economy.
Schwarzenegger announced on Jan. 31 that he is supporting McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
The governor noted that his wife, Maria Shriver, is a lifelong Democrat who supports Barack Obama.
Schwarzenegger told the conference that he likes the environmental stands of each of the three presidential candidates: McCain, Obama and Democrat Hillary Clinton. But said he sided with McCain because he knows him best and has a long working relationship with the Arizona senator.
On Tuesday night, the Milken audience was asked, by a show of applause, which of the three candidates they supported. It was a close call between McCain and Obama who the audience liked the most. Only a handful put their hands together for Clinton, who won the California primary over Obama handily earlier this year.
Because he was born outside the United States, the Austrian-born Schwarzenegger is not eligible to run for president. If he were, perhaps he would not have uttered the line on Wednesday that “Nobody is dying to go to Iowa,” the state that holds the first contest in the presidential nominating process and one where candidates are expected to spend alot of time wooing voters. Schwarzenegger said that when he was extoling the virtues of California.
Reporting by Bernie Woodall
Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage.
Photo credit: Reuters/Phil McCarten (Schwarzenegger participates in a panel discussion at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, Calif.)


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