Horserace
October 29, 2008 9:55 AM

Starting Gate: Hogging The Oxygen

By
Vaughn Ververs
Topics
Starting Gate
What can $150 million raised in September do for a campaign? Well, for starters, it allows Barack Obama to put the pedal to the metal in the final week of the campaign and make it much more difficult for John McCain to stage what at this point would have to be considered a comeback.

One-day-at-a-time thinking starts to grow in magnitude when there are just a handful of them left and Obama's financial situation is helping him to suck a little of the oxygen out of the dwindling time. The Democratic nominee will air a 30-minute television ad on three networks tonight – CBS, NBC and Fox. Little official is known about the content of the ad but it's the first time a major party candidate has taken such a chunk of expensive airtime (Ross Perot did it in 1992).

The ad is likely to draw a large amount of speculation and attention throughout the day and heading into Thursday. On top of that, Bill Clinton will appear with Obama for the first time in the campaign – another sure headline-grabber – and the candidate is slated to hit the Daily Show as well (for those younger voters who might miss the news).

John McCain's campaign has certainly shown a penchant for stealing away some of the attention Obama gets (remember their "celebrity" ads launched amidst Obama's foreign trip this summer). But with time so short, the bar of "surprises" rises ever higher and the risk of appearing gimmicky grows.

The timing could hardly be better for Obama to rev things up as glimmers of hope are starting to pop up from McCain's standpoint. A strategy memo from McCain's lead pollster Bill McInturff provides some optimistic nuggets for McCain's prospects and claiming that the Republican has "made impressive strides over the last week," in their polling numbers. "As other public polls begin to show Senator Obama dropping below 50%," McInturff writes, "and the margin over McCain beginning to approach margin of error with a week left, all signs say we are headed to an election that may easily be too close to call by next Tuesday."

McInturff says McCain has been gaining strength among key voting groups like non-college men, rural voters, "soft" Democrats and "Walmart moms" as well as experiencing a "pop" among Independent voters. The sunny outlook is tempered a bit by McInturff's prediction that turnout is likely to reach record numbers (something generally thought to benefit Obama), but he also predicts that the remaining undecided voters will break heavily for McCain, as they did for Hillary Clinton in the last two months of the Democratic primary.

It's the kind of race assessment you expect from just about any campaign but the race has tightened just a tad in the last couple of days. But momentum is an important factor in presidential campaigns and Obama's strategy is aimed at trying to make sure McCain doesn't get any.

Around The Track

  • A new Cronkite/Eight poll shows McCain with just a 2-point lead in his home state of Arizona, leading Obama 46 percent to 44 percent.

  • A new series of AP/GfK polls show Obama with a lead in four states carried by President Bush in 2004 – Ohio, Nevada, Colorado and Virginia – and essentially tied in two more – North Carolina and Florida.

  • The Washington Post reports that the Obama campaign is allowing the use of pre-paid credit cards for donations that "could potentially be used to evade limits on how much an individual is legally allowed to give or to mask a contributor's identity."

  • Conservative leaders are planning a post-election strategy session to plot where the movement goes from here, whether McCain wins or loses, the Politico reports.
  • Add a Comment See all 26 Comments
    by susanram1 October 30, 2008 12:36 AM EDT
    Go Obama-Biden ''08! A number of commentators have been critical about Obama''s ability to raise such a large sum of money. He did it largely through donations from millions of ordinary Americans who are longing for change.
    Reply to this comment
    by kansas1946 October 29, 2008 9:54 PM EDT
    Do American voters really need (or want) to watch a 30 minute Barack Obama infomercial? We are literally being barraged with images and sound bites of Barack Obama. The blatant media bias is sickening. Enough already.


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    Posted by CloverNYC at 01:52 PM : Oct 29, 2008
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    Well, I would suggest not watching if it is making you sick. Of course, tonights Obama fest has nothing to do with media bias, (unless you are talking about their bias towards money) because Obama is paying for the time. Besides, I just figure this is payback. I have been turning off my TV for years everytime Bush was on. Now you can turn off yours when President Obama is on.
    Reply to this comment
    by catmill October 29, 2008 7:08 PM EDT
    On MSNBC Madeleine Albright stated that Barack Obama is "the best possible person to be President."
    A clip was played of Sarah Palin bragging on how she runs Alaska "we share collectively profits from all resourses." A clip of McCain proposing a law that says it should be illegal to use campaign funds to purchase CLOTHES to wear during the campaign. Two liars and one who is a traitor in the white house???
    Reply to this comment
    by whosaid1 October 29, 2008 5:52 PM EDT
    karela33: And you beleive this....because Obama said so ? You should start thinking for youself....but then, my guess is that you''ll know that for the next election.
    Reply to this comment
    by jsilver2th October 29, 2008 5:41 PM EDT
    I think there''s a lot of JEALOUSY
    Reply to this comment
    by karela33 October 29, 2008 5:08 PM EDT
    Do ya''all remember the swift boat attacks? Obama raised this money fair and square from well over three million people. When he hit one million it made the news big time because no candidate had ever received donations from so many people before. It''s fair to wage the best campaign you can. It''s fair to be innovative and successful at fund raising. Obama was. McCain wasn''t. Republicans have played dirty for a long time. They''ve won by using fear and lies and smears. Obama came up with a campaign plan that worked around their game plan, out raised, out smarted and out campaigned them at every turn. And he did it a whole lot cleaner than the republicans have in the past and in the present. I can''t wait to see what he has for us tonight. And before you feel too bad for John, he got a free hour on Larry King tonight. CNN likes to do their part.
    Reply to this comment
    by clovernyc October 29, 2008 4:52 PM EDT
    Do American voters really need (or want) to watch a 30 minute Barack Obama infomercial? We are literally being barraged with images and sound bites of Barack Obama. The blatant media bias is sickening. Enough already.
    Reply to this comment
    by paulzfun October 29, 2008 4:25 PM EDT
    Repub''s, what about the $700 billion redistribution of wealth to Wall Street banks, ins. companies and even auto mfrs. ALL taxation is redistribution clueless ones.
    Reply to this comment
    by koko98-2009 October 29, 2008 4:14 PM EDT
    What CBS calls sucking some of us call free speech.
    Reply to this comment
    by mahdeealoo October 29, 2008 4:08 PM EDT
    What this article is not telling you is that the fabrication of McCain actually pulling himself up out of his contrived contempt, lies, and fear mongering have backfired on him and his aides will tell him anything to keep it "looking" like has any glimmer of a chance to pull up. IMO, he doesn''t hold a candle to Obama. McCain would only lead the country with the same anger, contempt, and fear mongering or worse. How do you think a candidate such as this could ever lead this nation with a clear head? A head buzzing with anger is not presidential material. End of election fodder.
    Reply to this comment
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