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# Monday, November 03, 2008

MIAMI – The presidential candidates are capping a history-making campaign with a dash from Florida through a half-dozen other crucial states as John McCain tries for an upset over Barack Obama.

With little sleep, McCain was darting through seven swing states Monday, arguing that victory was virtually at hand despite national polls showing otherwise.

"My friends, it's official: There's just one day left until we take America in a new direction," the Republican Party's choice to succeed President Bush told a raucous, heavily Hispanic rally in Miami just after midnight.

Obama, comfortably ahead in national polls, was getting a later start with a rally in Jacksonville at midday and a swing through longtime GOP bastions that might go to his Democratic Party this time.

"I feel pretty peaceful," Obama said on the "Russ Parr Morning Show."

"The question is going to be who wants it more," he added. "And I hope that our supporters want it bad, because I think the country needs it."

It has been the longest and most expensive presidential contest ever — featuring for the first time an African-American as a major party standardbearer.

Asked in an interview broadcast Monday morning what most displeased him about the nearly 2-year-long contest, Obama cited attacks launched by Republicans against his wife, Michelle.

"There's a Republican or right wing media outlet ... that went after my wife for awhile in a way that I thought was just completely out of bounds," Obama said on CBS's "The Early Show."

"I would have never considered or expected my allies to do something comparable to the spouse of an opponent," he added. "They support their spouse, but generally they really should be bystanders in this process, even if they're campaigning for me. ... I mean that's what you'd expect. And that doesn't make them suddenly targets."

All that's left now is for the campaigns to make sure people vote, unleashing an unprecedented get-out-the-vote campaigns.

Surrogates for both men, including Democrat Caroline Kennedy and one-time Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, hopped from morning show to morning show urging voters to get to the polls if they haven't already cast ballots. More early voting is happening than ever, a process that changes the meaning of Election Day somewhat, with some 27 million votes cast in 30 states as of Saturday night. That's more than ever. Democrats outnumbered Republicans in pre-Election Day voting in key states.

All told, the election will have cost $1 billion, and the candidates together will have spent about $8 per presidential vote.

The candidates were sprinting across time zones and states in eleventh-hour bids to get to the magic number of 270 electoral votes — the total needed to seal the presidency.

McCain's journey stretched from Tampa through Tennessee, whose media market reaches into the much-coveted state of Virginia, which is trending Democratic for the first time since 1964.

McCain also was scheduled to hit Pennsylvania, Indiana, New Mexico, Colorado and Nevada before ending early Tuesday with a rally in Prescott, Ariz. He was scheduled to finish the day — and the campaign — at home in the Phoenix area.

Obama was set to make a quick trip to Virginia and Indiana before returning to Chicago for a massive rally in Grant Park.

McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, was racing through five Bush states — Ohio, Missouri, Iowa, Colorado and Nevada — in an effort to boost conservative turnout. The Alaska governor has been a popular draw for many GOP base voters.

Joe Biden, Obama's running mate, was to campaign in Missouri, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Polls show the six closest states are Florida, Indiana, Missouri, North Carolina, Nevada and Ohio. The campaigns also are running aggressive ground games elsewhere, including Iowa, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Colorado and Virginia.

Obama exuded confidence Sunday at events in three cities in the bellwether state of Ohio, which voted for President Bush in 2000 and 2004 but is trending Democratic this year as it struggles against an anemic economy.

"We cannot afford to slow down or sit back or let up," Obama told voters at an evening rally in Cincinnati. "We need to win an election on Tuesday."

In New Hampshire, McCain held his last town hall meeting of the 2008 campaign — something of an exercise in nostalgia, as he conducted dozens of such freewheeling affairs in the months leading up to his victory in that state's primary.

McCain took voter questions on issues like illegal immigration and paying for college while thanking New Hampshire for rescuing his campaign in 2008 and in the 2000 Republican primary, when he briefly upended George W. Bush.

"I come to the people of New Hampshire to ask them to let me go on one more mission," McCain said in Peterborough, where he was introduced by Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling.

___

Associated Press writer Nedra Pickler contributed to this report from Cincinnati. Associated Press Writer Laurie Kellman contributed to this report from Washington.

Monday, November 03, 2008 8:34:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    - Trackback
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TAMPA, Fla. – Republican John McCain is urging Florida voters to help him win the state and the presidential election.

The presidential hopeful kicked off a seven-state sprint to the finish in Tampa, the western end of the state's vote-rich I-4 corridor.

McCain told a modestly attended outdoor rally Monday: "With this kind of enthusiasm, this kind of intensity we will win Florida and we will win the election."

The Arizona senator said that he, like Democratic rival Barack Obama, opposes President Bush's economic policies. But McCain insisted he wouldn't raise taxes and that Obama could be counted on to do so.

McCain was headed next to Virginia and then Pennsylvania, Indiana, New Mexico, Nevada and home to Arizona early Tuesday morning.

Monday, November 03, 2008 8:33:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Sen. Barack Obama spoke at the Doolittle Community Center about a year ago, and the working class crowd began streaming out before he was even finished.

This was just after Sen. Hillary Clinton ran the table on the Sunday talk shows, and Obama’s campaign seemed like a well-intentioned lark.

His key problem a year ago, and one he explicitly — if clumsily — tried to confront that day at Doolittle, was connecting with working-class voters on the bread and on the butter: jobs, home values, health insurance.

He was the dreaded “wine-track” candidate, the hero of arugula eaters and Volvo drivers.

What a difference a year makes.

After a grueling Democratic primary season during which Obama was forced to learn how to communicate economic empathy and anger, the junior senator from Illinois has settled into his role as a champion of the working class.

This Obama was on full display during rallies Saturday that drew thousands in both Reno and at Bonanza High School.

The economy has collapsed, both here and nationally, and Obama has been well positioned to scoop up voters looking for a more activist government to lend them a hand, and stick it to the rich guys a little in the offing.

“We need policies that grow our economy from the bottom up, so that every American, everywhere, has the chance to get ahead,” Obama said. “Not just the folks who own the casinos but the folks who are serving in the casinos. Because if we’ve learned anything from this economic crisis, it’s that we’re all connected; we’re all in this together; and we will rise or fall as one nation — as one people.”

That was the high-minded stuff, but Obama also seemed practically giddy delivering a series of blows right to the Republican kidney — a failing economy, the blame for which voters are placing squarely on the GOP from top to bottom.

“At this rate, the question isn’t just ‘Are you better off than you were four years ago?’ it’s ‘Are you better off than you were four weeks ago?’ ”

Obama used a similar message earlier Saturday at the UNR baseball stadium in Reno, repeating the phrase “middle class,” “middle class,” “middle class.”

The campaign of Republican nominee Sen. John McCain has done its best to claim the mantle of the working and middle classes, using an Ohio plumber as a symbol of defiance against Obama’s economic policies, which they say are “socialist.”

Rick Gorka, a McCain spokesman, said in an e-mail: “Barack Obama brought his ever evolving campaign to Las Vegas today where he continued to promote his plan to raise taxes on ‘Joe the Plumber’ ...”

This battle for the middle class is especially acute in Nevada, where Obama is trying for a Western trifecta, having run up comfortable leads in Colorado and New Mexico. Polls here give him a slim, statistically insignificant lead, though early voting totals — thus far favoring Democrats — have astounded Nevada political veterans. In his 19th — and likely final — trip to Nevada since the campaign began 18 long months ago Obama told voters in Reno and Las Vegas to vote early.

Obama’s line of attack isn’t particularly novel, but it is brutal in a time of economic distress, joblessness, rising health care costs and depressed home values.

“When it comes to the policies that matter for middle-class families, there’s not an inch of daylight between George Bush and John McCain,” Obama said in Las Vegas.

He began a refrain: “Like George Bush, John McCain wants to ...”

What followed were attacks on Bush/McCain for trying to privatize Social Security; giving tax breaks to oil companies and corporations that ship jobs overseas; and proposing to tax health care benefits.

And finally: “I think we’ve had enough of the Bush-McCain economics.”

He said the Wall Street bailout was the first step to economic recovery but added the country needs an “immediate rescue plan.”

Obama proposed a jobs tax credit for each new employee companies hire, eliminating capital gains taxes for small businesses, giving emergency loans to struggling businesses and enacting a three-month moratorium on home foreclosures.

He also pledged to cut taxes for 95 percent of working families. To illustrate his point, he asked those in the audience making less than $250,000 a year to raise their hands. Nearly everyone did. (He’s promised to increase taxes on families making more than $250,000, and cut them for everyone else.)

Obama also has a proposal for near-universal health insurance and $15 billion a year in research and development for renewable energy.

Given the tough economic times, the wars and the immediate cost of the Wall Street bailout/rescue, achieving all these will be difficult, if not impossible.

McCain has called for making the Bush tax cuts — which he originally voted against and are going to sunset — permanent. He’s also called for cutting corporate taxes, phasing out the alternative minimum tax and doubling the value of exemptions for each dependent to $7,000.

McCain has also vowed to cut government spending by eliminating earmarks, though they make up a tiny percentage of federal spending, which is dominated by defense, Social Security, Medicare and interest on debt.

McCain knows he’s saddled with the Bush legacy, which is why he’s unleashed tough attacks on his own president in recent days.

But Obama is allowing no space between Bush and McCain. “I can take ten more days of John McCain’s attacks, but the American people can’t take four more years of the same failed policies and the same failed politics. We’re not going to let George Bush pass the torch to John McCain. It’s time for change.”

David McGrath Schwartz reported from Reno.

source: lasvegassun.com

Wednesday, October 22, 2008 1:23:19 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Tuesday, October 21, 2008

**Exclusive**

Oprah Winfrey is offering to "produce" the half-hour Barack Obama advertisement set to air on Oct. 29, a top source tells the DRUDGE REPORT. The Daytime TV dynamo has even offered up her studio space in Chicago.

"She's been begging Obama to let her help," a source explaines.

O & O

It is not clear if the Obama campaign would pay Winfrey for any production services.

Requests for comment from Oprah went un-returned.

The Obama campaign strongly denies Oprah will be involved in the ad: Bill Richardson's former senior adviser, Mark Putnam is producing. Previously, Putnam produced commercials for Democratic campaigns in 44 states.

The TV finale is seen as a high risk move, designed to remove any remaining voter doubts on the first term senator.

CBS, NBC and FOX will air the info-commercial, with the start time of a potential World Series Game 6 being pushed back by eight minutes.

Mystery surrounds the production: Will it simply be Obama sitting at a desk reading TelePrompTer? Or will it incorporate multi-media elements, on the road footage, and sweeping historic images.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 10:17:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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Joe Biden warned that America's enemies would test Barack Obama with an international crisis within six months if he's elected president - a shocking comment John McCain eagerly pounced on yesterday to claim Obama isn't ready to be commander-in-chief.

"Mark my words," Biden told donors at a Seattle fund-raiser Sunday night.

"It will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama like they did John Kennedy. The world is looking. We're about to elect a brilliant 47-year-old senator president of the United States of America.

"Watch. We're going to have an international crisis, a generated crisis, to test the mettle of this guy.

"And he's going to need help . . . to stand with him. Because it's not going to be apparent initially; it's not going to be apparent that we're right."

McCain treated Biden's comments as a gift while stumping across Missouri yesterday.

"The next president won't have time to get used to the office. We face many challenges here at home and many enemies abroad in this dangerous world," McCain said. "We don't want a president who invites 'testing' from the world at a time when our economy is in crisis and Americans are already fighting two wars."

McCain said it was even "more troubling" that Biden suggested supporters stick by Obama if the actions he takes are wrong or unpopular.

"Senator Obama won't have the right response, and we know that because we've seen the wrong response from him over and over during this campaign," he said

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 10:14:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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