Obama extends advertising; McCain says he's a leftist
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Despite John McCain's prediction of an upset, Barack Obama reached for a landslide Friday, invading his rival's home state with TV ads and building a lead in early voting in key battlegrounds as the presidential race headed into a hectic final weekend.
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Despite John McCain's prediction of an upset, Barack Obama reached for a landslide Friday, invading his rival's home state with TV ads and building a lead in early voting in key battlegrounds as the presidential race headed into a hectic final weekend.
McCain charged that Obama, bidding to become the first black president, "began his campaign in the liberal left lane of politics and has never left it. He's more liberal than a senator who calls himself a socialist,'' he added in Hanoverton, Ohio, a reference to Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont.
Sen. John McCain campaigns with his wife Cindy and former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani in Hanoverton, Ohio, on Friday.
Yet with the economy almost certainly in a recession and the country clamoring for change after eight years of Republican rule, even some of McCain's allies conceded the obvious. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said it would take a "major struggle for him to win'' -- although he quickly added the Arizona senator had come back before when he had been counted out.
Privately, McCain's aides said their man trailed Obama by 4 points nationwide in internal polling.
An Associated Press-Yahoo News poll of likely voters put the Democrat ahead, 51 to 43, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
The same survey gave McCain reason to hope -- one in seven voters, 14 percent of the total -- said they were undecided or might yet change their minds.
While the race for the White House drew most of the attention, minority Republicans in Congress braced for the loss of more seats in both the House and Senate.
Some said fresh polling in North Carolina suggested that incumbent GOP Elizabeth Dole had fallen further behind since airing an ad that tried to tie Democratic rival Kay Hagan to atheists.
Four days before the election, Obama was expanding his reach, and drawing large crowds as he moved methodically from one state to another that voted Republican in 2004.
"What you started here in Iowa has swept the nation,'' he told several thousand on an unusually warm Halloween day in the Midwest. His victory in the state's Democratic caucuses on Jan. 3, set him on the path to the party's nomination, and now to a lead in the presidential polls in the campaign's final hours.
Aides announced he would air television commercials in McCain's home state of Arizona as well as in North Dakota and Georgia. He had run ads in the latter two states earlier in the campaign before suspending that effort.
The ad in McCain's state was a soft sell in a campaign that has had its share of attacks. This spot featured endorsements from former Secretary of State Colin Powell and Warren Buffett, the nation's best-known investor.
Even so, McCain's campaign manager, Rick Davis, dismissed it as a waste. "We encourage them to pick other states that we intend to win'' to spend their money, he said.
Davis contended, "We are witnessing perhaps, I believe, one of the greatest comebacks since John McCain won the primary.''
Privately, some Republicans expressed concerned about early voting trends, although the party had yet to unleash its final 72-hour program, designed to reach millions of voters deemed sympathetic to McCain and the Republicans.
Statistics showed Democrats ahead among pre-Election Day voters in Iowa, North Carolina, Florida, Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada. Bush won all six in 2004, and McCain needs to win most of them to claim the White House this year.
In Georgia, one of the states where Obama began advertising on Friday, official figures show 35 percent of the early votes have been cast by blacks, and lines have been longest in and around reliably Democratic Atlanta. In the 2004 election, blacks accounted for 24 percent of the state's ballots.
McCain was on the second day of a bus tour through battleground Ohio, a state that supported Bush and has voted with the winner in each presidential election for two decades.
"We're closing, my friends, and we're going to win in Ohio. We're a few points down but we're coming back and we're coming back strong,'' he said.
The Republican released a new television ad that had the feel of a campaign-closing appeal.
In it, he pledged to fix the economy, cut government waste and safeguard the nation's security.
"I've served my country since I was 17 years old. And spent five years longing for her shores. I came home dedicated to a cause greater than my own,'' said the former Navy pilot who was shot down, held and tortured for more than five years as a Vietnam prisoner of war.
Obama's itinerary bespoke confidence: stops in Iowa and Indiana on Friday, Nevada, Colorado and Missouri on Sunday, and Ohio and Virginia on Monday. The states account for 76 electoral votes combined, out of the 270 needed to win the White House, and all are states that voted for Bush in 2004.
McCain's campaign-ending schedule included Ohio, Virginia, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Florida, Indiana, New Mexico and Nevada before ending with a midnight rally in Prescott, Ariz. All are states that voted Republican four years ago, except Pennsylvania. He also scheduled an appearance on "Saturday Night Live.''
Much of the difference in poll data derived from varying assumptions about voter turnout.
Curtis Gans, director of the nonpartisan Committee for the Study of the American Electorate at American University, predicted in an interview that participation will be the highest it's been since 1960, when an estimated 63.8 percent of eligible voters went to the polls.
"It's driven by 90 percent of the American people thinking the country is on the wrong track,'' he said. "The only question is how many Republicans are not going to show up.''
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Despite John McCain's prediction of an upset, Barack Obama reached for a landslide Friday, invading his rival's home state with TV ads and building a lead in early voting in key battlegrounds as the presidential race headed into a hectic final weekend.
McCain charged that Obama, bidding to become the first black president, "began his campaign in the liberal left lane of politics and has never left it. He's more liberal than a senator who calls himself a socialist,'' he added in Hanoverton, Ohio, a reference to Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont.
Yet with the economy almost certainly in a recession and the country clamoring for change after eight years of Republican rule, even some of McCain's allies conceded the obvious. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said it would take a "major struggle for him to win'' -- although he quickly added the Arizona senator had come back before when he had been counted out.
Privately, McCain's aides said their man trailed Obama by 4 points nationwide in internal polling.
An Associated Press-Yahoo News poll of likely voters put the Democrat ahead, 51 to 43, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
The same survey gave McCain reason to hope -- one in seven voters, 14 percent of the total -- said they were undecided or might yet change their minds.
While the race for the White House drew most of the attention, minority Republicans in Congress braced for the loss of more seats in both the House and Senate.
Some said fresh polling in North Carolina suggested that incumbent GOP Elizabeth Dole had fallen further behind since airing an ad that tried to tie Democratic rival Kay Hagan to atheists.
Four days before the election, Obama was expanding his reach, and drawing large crowds as he moved methodically from one state to another that voted Republican in 2004.
"What you started here in Iowa has swept the nation,'' he told several thousand on an unusually warm Halloween day in the Midwest. His victory in the state's Democratic caucuses on Jan. 3, set him on the path to the party's nomination, and now to a lead in the presidential polls in the campaign's final hours.
Aides announced he would air television commercials in McCain's home state of Arizona as well as in North Dakota and Georgia. He had run ads in the latter two states earlier in the campaign before suspending that effort.
The ad in McCain's state was a soft sell in a campaign that has had its share of attacks. This spot featured endorsements from former Secretary of State Colin Powell and Warren Buffett, the nation's best-known investor.
Even so, McCain's campaign manager, Rick Davis, dismissed it as a waste. "We encourage them to pick other states that we intend to win'' to spend their money, he said.
Davis contended, "We are witnessing perhaps, I believe, one of the greatest comebacks since John McCain won the primary.''
Privately, some Republicans expressed concerned about early voting trends, although the party had yet to unleash its final 72-hour program, designed to reach millions of voters deemed sympathetic to McCain and the Republicans.
Statistics showed Democrats ahead among pre-Election Day voters in Iowa, North Carolina, Florida, Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada. Bush won all six in 2004, and McCain needs to win most of them to claim the White House this year.
In Georgia, one of the states where Obama began advertising on Friday, official figures show 35 percent of the early votes have been cast by blacks, and lines have been longest in and around reliably Democratic Atlanta. In the 2004 election, blacks accounted for 24 percent of the state's ballots.
McCain was on the second day of a bus tour through battleground Ohio, a state that supported Bush and has voted with the winner in each presidential election for two decades.
"We're closing, my friends, and we're going to win in Ohio. We're a few points down but we're coming back and we're coming back strong,'' he said.
The Republican released a new television ad that had the feel of a campaign-closing appeal.
In it, he pledged to fix the economy, cut government waste and safeguard the nation's security.
"I've served my country since I was 17 years old. And spent five years longing for her shores. I came home dedicated to a cause greater than my own,'' said the former Navy pilot who was shot down, held and tortured for more than five years as a Vietnam prisoner of war.
Obama's itinerary bespoke confidence: stops in Iowa and Indiana on Friday, Nevada, Colorado and Missouri on Sunday, and Ohio and Virginia on Monday. The states account for 76 electoral votes combined, out of the 270 needed to win the White House, and all are states that voted for Bush in 2004.
McCain's campaign-ending schedule included Ohio, Virginia, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Florida, Indiana, New Mexico and Nevada before ending with a midnight rally in Prescott, Ariz. All are states that voted Republican four years ago, except Pennsylvania. He also scheduled an appearance on "Saturday Night Live.''
Much of the difference in poll data derived from varying assumptions about voter turnout.
Curtis Gans, director of the nonpartisan Committee for the Study of the American Electorate at American University, predicted in an interview that participation will be the highest it's been since 1960, when an estimated 63.8 percent of eligible voters went to the polls.
"It's driven by 90 percent of the American people thinking the country is on the wrong track,'' he said. "The only question is how many Republicans are not going to show up.''
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Posted By: Chavez66(5:33pm 11-01-2008)
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Ross Perot would later say, "After he came home, he walked with a limp, she [Carol McCain] walked with a limp. So he threw her over for a poster girl with big money from Arizona [Cindy McCain, his current wife] and the rest is history."
Ross Perot paid her medical bills and was a strong supporter of POWs. They go on and on about his being tortured and injured but first thing he does after getting back from Nam was to have extramarital affairs. He even called himself "selfish and immature" concerning that time. POW coming home selfish and immature. Despite the possibility of being the 3rd gen. 4-star Admiral he was very nearly the single worst student of his class at the Naval Academy. He admits to doing just enough to pass in tough subjects like math. He was a sub-par pilot who crashed 2 planes and ran into telephone lines. Was he even really shot down?
The beer heiress half his age he was hooking up with while still married. But he was still first in line to bash Clinton.
Posted By: True WV(10:02am 11-01-2008)
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Barack Obama's aunt, a Kenyan woman who has been quietly living in public housing in Boston, is in the United States illegally after an immigration judge rejected her request for asylum four years ago, The Associated Press has learned..........not only illegally living here, but in public housing!!! Isn't the US a great country.
As news spread this week that the West Virginia Supreme Court had eliminated the position of juvenile referee, some judges and others questioned what that will mean for teenagers in the criminal justice system.
A state board says a charitable pharmacy started by Gov. Joe Manchin has become the first of its type in the state to be licensed to ship mail-order prescriptions.
The state will spend millions of dollars on new group homes, day treatment programs, jobs at psychiatric hospitals and other items associated with mental health care under an agreement reached Thursday.
Carte Goodwin, general counsel for Gov. Joe Manchin during his first term between 2005 and 2009, is thinking about running for the congressional seat held by Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., since 2000.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- West Virginia has ended its budget year with a trio of positive signs for state government's finances, but the recession and other factors overshadow each fiscal indicator.
For passenger vehicles, the hike means an increase from $1.25 to $2 per toll plaza, while the cash rate for commercial trucks will jump from $4.25 to $6.75 per toll plaza.
It's all but decided that the state Parkways Authority will approve toll increases on the West Virginia Turnpike on Wednesday. Still to be resolved are the amount of the increase, when it will take effect, and what sorts of discounts may be offered to Turnpike commuters.
West Virginia will have trouble recruiting and retaining teachers, State Police troopers and other public employees if the Public Employees Insurance Agency cuts the subsidy, speakers said at a public hearing Monday evening.
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Ross Perot paid her medical bills and was a strong supporter of POWs. They go on and on about his being tortured and injured but first thing he does after getting back from Nam was to have extramarital affairs. He even called himself "selfish and immature" concerning that time. POW coming home selfish and immature. Despite the possibility of being the 3rd gen. 4-star Admiral he was very nearly the single worst student of his class at the Naval Academy. He admits to doing just enough to pass in tough subjects like math. He was a sub-par pilot who crashed 2 planes and ran into telephone lines. Was he even really shot down?
The beer heiress half his age he was hooking up with while still married. But he was still first in line to bash Clinton.