Formed in 1997, a 527 Political Action Committee called
Vietnam Veterans Against John McCain, similar to Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, attacked
John McCain for his military record. Former Vietnam veteran and co-founder
Ted Sampley made several false claims on McCain's military service. Sampley claimed that McCain had not been tortured while held captive in Vietnam, and that he had collaborated with the Vietcong in exchange for medical treatment. Sampley would later found another group called Vietnam Veterans Against John Kerry during the 2004 presidential race.
The New York Times reported in 2008 that many Swift Boat veterans, "especially those who had nothing to do with the group that attacked Senator John Kerry's military record in the 2004 election—want their good name back, and the good names of the men not lucky enough to come home alive", expressed regret and dismay that the term "swift boat" has come to represent a political attack and "political chicanery" against a member of a different party. The term was also used by a representative of
Barack Obama's
re-election campaign to describe the documentary film
Dishonorable Disclosures and an associated ad campaign released by the
Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund on the topic of the
death of Osama bin Laden. During the
2016 presidential race, feminist
Gloria Steinem accused
Donald Trump of swiftboating his rival
Hillary Clinton, calling her "Crooked Hillary", despite his
record of much more frequent and severe lying. Clinton compared Republicans' statements about
Christine Blasey Ford during the
Kavanaugh confirmation process to the "swift-boating of John Kerry". During the
2024 United States presidential election, Republican attacks on the military record of Minnesota governor
Tim Walz were widely characterized as "swiftboating" in the media. ==Conservative reactions==