Campaigns Ratchet Up The Rhetoric
Obama Sharpens His Tone Against McCain As Republican Says His Rival Does Not Have What It Takes To Be Commander-In-Chief
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Obama Plays It Safe
Barack Obama is playing it safe in the final week of the election, but his Achilles' heel might be taxes and the McCain campaign isn't taking that for granted. Dean Reynolds reports.
-
Video
Last Squeeze On Political Buzz
CBS News Political Analysts Dee Dee Myers and Dan Bartlett comment on Sen. Barack Obama's final push with network airtime and Sen. John McCain campaigning with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
-
Video
Obama, McCain On Medicare
The poorly funded Medicare program has faced massive deficits and is predicted to go bankrupt by the year 2019. Nancy Cordes finds out where the presidential candidates stand on this issue.
-
Photo
Both candidates are talking tough as there are just six days before Election Day. (AP)
-
Photo Essay
Obama On The Trail
Sen. Barack Obama campaigns for the presidency.
-
Photo Essay
McCain Campaigns
Arizona Sen. John McCain crisscrosses the U.S. in search of votes.
Rallying a crowd Wednesday in North Carolina, the Democratic presidential contender said McCain will soon "be accusing me of being a secret communist because I shared my toys in kindergarten."
Obama also tried to turn around McCain's reliance on the argument of helping "Joe the Plumber." He's the Ohio man who gained national attention when Obama told him during a campaign stop that he wanted to "spread the wealth around."
Obama said people will be worse off under a McCain presidency whether they are "Suzy the student, or Nancy the nurse, or Tina the teacher, or Carl the construction worker."
Meanwhile, McCain said Wednesday that the country's economic problems will pass but that threats against the nation will not - and that Obama is not up to the task of protecting the United States.
In returning to the issue of national security, seen as McCain's strongest argument for his candidacy before the financial crisis overwhelmed the campaign, McCain stood with former military officers and national security advisers to ask rhetorically whether Obama had the wisdom and judgment to be commander in chief.
"The question is whether this is a man who has what it takes to protect America from Osama bin Laden, al Qaeda and the other great threats in the world," McCain said. "He has given no reason to answer in the affirmative."
"When that day arrives and the worries of economic crisis have fallen away, we will find awaiting our country all of the same great challenges and dangers that were there all along," he said. (Read more about McCain's statement in From The Road.)
McCain was spending his day competing for Florida's 27 electoral votes, considered crucial to his effort to assemble the needed 270. At a morning rally in Miami's Little Havana, he also continued his attacks on Obama over the economy. (Read more on the campaign in Florida)
"I have a plan to hold the line on taxes and cut them to make America more competitive," said McCain. Speaking at a Miami lumber yard that employs 100 people, down from 300 because of economic turmoil, he argued that Obama's economic plans would devastate small businesses.
"Sen. Obama and Sen. Biden ought to understand: Raising taxes makes a bad economy worse," McCain said. He warned that Obama's rhetoric masks a big-spending liberal politician.
"He can't do that without raising your taxes or digging us further into debt," said McCain.
And McCain has crafted a populist argument to deflect conservative criticism of his vote a $700 billion bailout of financial institutions. "I'm going to make sure we take care of the working people who were devastated by the excess and corruption of Wall Street and Washington," he said.
McCain also touted his plans to boost domestic offshore oil production, saying he said would leave the decision on drilling to the states but give them an incentive to increase production.
"We will drill offshore, and we will drill now," he said. "If we're going to drill off the state of Florida, you deserve more of those revenues. They shouldn't be sent to Washington, they should be sent to Tallahassee."
Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin also talked about energy on Wednesday, calling for a "clean break" from the Bush administration's energy policies, which she says rely too much on importing foreign oil.
The Alaska governor said the recent drop in gas and oil prices shouldn't deter consumers and lawmakers from seeking alternative energy sources. She cast energy independence as a national security issue and said dependence on Middle East oil leaves the U.S. more vulnerable to terrorists.
"We not only provide wealth to the sponsors of terror, we provide high-value targets to the terrorists themselves," Palin said. "Across the world are pipelines, refineries, transit routes and terminals for the oil we rely on. And al Qaeda terrorists know where they are." (Read more about her speech.)
McCain at his rally also sought to energize the Cuban section of Miami, a devout Republican base, with derisive references to the Cuba's Castro brothers and ridicule of Obama's willingness to talk with hostile foreign leaders.
As for the Castro brothers, "We'll sit down with them right after they empty the political prisons," McCain said.
After his stop in North Carolina, Obama also heads to Florida where he is aiming for a one-man television blitz on Wednesday night, saturating prime-time with a 30-minute ad and popping up on the buzzy late-night TV scene.Ways To Win
Calculate your own path to the presidency with our Electoral Vote prediction map.
CBS News' Maria Gavrilovic reports that according to aides, the campaign is trying to gain midweek momentum that they hope will carry them through Election Day.
"For weeks now, Obama has been playing it safe, sticking to his message on the economy and defending his tax plan," reports Gavrilovic. "The campaign calls this "consistency" but for some voters, the end of the campaign season may have become a bit run-of-the-mill. The campaign hopes to change that today." (Read more from Gavrilovic)
The centerpiece of the effort is Obama's infomercial. It is rare for a candidate to buy a block of prime-time real estate to tell his story. Plenty costly, too.
The ad is expected to be a video montage of typical people talking about the challenges they face, with Obama explaining how he can help. A campaign adviser said the taped ad will feature a live cut-in to Obama, who is scheduled to be at a rally in Florida at the time.
The Obama team bought time on CBS, NBC and Fox for about $1 million per network. The spot airs at 8 p.m. EDT. It is also scheduled to run on Univision, BET, MSNBC and TV One.
Flush with cash from his record-shattering fundraising, Obama uses that advantage by buying up media time in ways that McCain cannot.
"What can $150 million raised in September do for a campaign?" writes CBSNews.com senior politics editor Vaughn Ververs in Horserace. "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." (Read more from Ververs)
McCain is purchasing loads of ad time, too. But the disparity between Obama and the Republicans is so wide that it has allowed Obama to spend in more states than McCain, appear more frequently in key markets and diversify his messages - some positive, some negative.
And negative is the tone for the latest Obama ad, a 30-second spot aimed at key states that uses McCain's own words against him and mocks Palin. Three quotes, one from 2005 and two from 2007, play off McCain's acknowledgment that he knows less about economic matters than other issues. In the last quote, McCain says he might have to rely on his vice president for expertise - and then the spot cuts to a winking Palin.
McCain countered with his own new ad Wednesday, dismissing Obama's infomercial as a "TV special."
"Behind the fancy speeches, grand promises and TV special, lies the truth," the McCain ad's announcer says. "With crises at home and abroad, Barack Obama lacks the experience America needs. And it shows. His response to our economic crisis is to spend and tax our economy deeper into recession. The fact is Barack Obama's not ready yet." (Read more about the latest ads and then watch them)
In addition to the paid television time tonight, Obama is also doing several interviews today. During a stop in Raleigh, N.C., Obama also will be interviewed by Charlie Gibson of ABC's "World News."
Later, in Florida, Obama will tape an appearance on Comedy Central's irreverent "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart. The segment will run at 11 p.m. EDT.
Obama may even be competing with himself.
During the same 11 p.m. slot, Obama is scheduled to appear at a campaign rally for the first time with former president Bill Clinton, whose wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, lost to Obama in the primaries.
The uniting of the former president and the would-be president in Kissimmee, Fla., is sure to draw live local and national television coverage.
©MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Ways To Win




- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
...
- 8
- next
See all 385 CommentsThis is not negative, as it is based on words from McSame''s own mouth, and thus gives a more accurate picture of the motivation, qualification, judgment, and temperament of "really ol'' boy" McSame, and at the end reminds all about "I can see Russia from my house" Palin''s failure to grasp the nature of questions put to her.
It apparently does these things without much added comment, giving the viewers credit for being able to judge for themselves.
Negative would be the McSame/Palin attempt to use lies, like him being a Muslim, or coded appeals to racism, such as "he''s not one of us," and totally unsupported comments like "surrendering in Iraq", and fear mongering such as the statement about Mr. Obama raising taxes, while everyone knows that Mr. Obama simply will let Bush''s cuts expire, which is not a raise, but a restoration.
If McSame can quote Mr. Obama with full sentences, in the original context, in the same way that Mr. Obama quotes McSame, on the issues, and not irrelevant smears, then McSame would also not be negative.
Problem is that on the issues, McSame bites it big time, as he is no more than Bush re-wrapped.
The polls are historically wrong when the the race is tight Obama is celebrating to early.
Obama''s plan will take from the rich that the rich earned.
Reject Barack Obama.
Posted by OneAmerican7 at 02:24 PM : Oct 29, 2008
*******
The only thing we are rejecting is the way the GOP has run the government for the last 8 years. The insanity that has come to define the Republican party is coming to an end.
Posted by danielle_mom at 02:40 PM : Oct 29, 2008
*****
So the rich will have to pay less taxes while a middle class family like mine will have to pay more?
No thanks, you can keep hoping that "trickle-down" economics might help you. Me, I prefer to see extra money in my paycheck and that can be done via Obama''s tax plan.
McCain wants to give a tax break to billionaires; Obama is giving a tax break to those who need it the most.
What a bunch of whiners.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by johndevinejr at 03:25 PM : Oct 29, 2008
Hit that nail right on the head!
It''s the only way these two are thinking, McCain has voted pro oil for years and if Palin voted anything besides oil and the welfare checks Alaskans get from it, she''s toast.
Stuck in the past with more of the same policies as well you guessed it George Bush.
Posted by danielle_mom at 02:40 PM : Oct 29, 2008
*****
So the rich will have to pay less taxes while a middle class family like mine will have to pay more?
No thanks, you can keep hoping that "trickle-down" economics might help you. Me, I prefer to see extra money in my paycheck and that can be done via Obama''''s tax plan.
McCain wants to give a tax break to billionaires; Obama is giving a tax break to those who need it the most.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by yeswecan09 at 02:57 PM : Oct 29, 2008
How about this WE including Corps all pay the same tax?
You cna hear it now from the Republicans. Oh no! That wouldn''t be fair!
Sadly Republicans do understand wellfare, it''s just a little reversed. Take form the poor or middle class give to the rich.
His campaign motto ought to be "Me First".
Very sad.
Forget Chi-town. Think Caracas.
I was making referance to another post how this free trade was a McCain and Bush thing. This was a Clinton thing called NAFTA. I''m not voting for Bush,but I sure am not going to vote Obama, I have my doubts once the media gets off Palin if Obama last a whole term before the truth comes out.
Mccain, Bush, and the rest of the GOP-
Managed to take Clinton''''s surplus,
And 8 years later they replaced it with:
Bigger Gov''''t --
Though they promised Smaller Govt-
Greater Debt-
Though they promised fiscal responsibility-
The largest Trade Deficit in history-
Outsourcing millions of US jobs
Then they Pulled a Commie Chavez move
Nationalizing Fannie and Freddie
The Socialization of our Financial Institutions-
With Billions in tax payer paid bailouts-
Institutional Welfare for Wall Street Incompetents-
War in Iraq and Afghanistan
Costing us 10 Billion + a month
Ridicule throughout the world--
But they did give Tax breaks and incentives to:
The upper 3% -
To Big Oil,
And the GOP Defense Conglomerates--
The Choice is Astonishingly Clear---
VOTE GOP
VOTE MCSAME
CONTINUE THE BUSH LEGACY
FOUR MORE GLORIOUS YEARS
OF GOP BS
McCain will continue the failed "trickle down" economics that has caused the current economic meltdown.
Obama will return the tax balance to the way that it was before bush took office, thereby returning money to the pockets of the middle class.
If you want to continue to funnel money to big-business as they expand in foreign countries, thereby taking jobs from American workers, vote McCain.
For some reason I have not got back one single post on why Ayers would have a fund raiser for the choosen one in his own home unless they are very good freinds or share the same veiws. I''m going to run for public office, would you have a fund raiser in your living room for me,although you don''t know me, we just pass in the neighborhood once in a while.
Does this mean the fundraiser is on! I set in the church with the Rev Wright for 20 yrs. and got married but I threw him under the bus a few months ago. He was no influence on me. Do you think once the hounds get off Palin they will come after the choosen one?
Country First?
Vietnam Vets against Traitor Mccain!!!
According to documentation obtained by the U.S. Veteran Dispatch, not only did POW McCain promise to give the communists "military information" in exchange for special hospital care not ordinarily available to U.S. prisoners, but he also made numerous antiwar radio broadcasts.
This is a violation of the Military Code of Conduct and is considered collaborating with the enemy.
The following is McCain''s own admission of collaboration in an article he wrote, printed May 14, 1973 in U.S. News and World Report:
"I think it was on the fourth day [after being shot down] that two guards came in, instead of one. One of them pulled back the blanket to show the other guard my injury. I looked at my knee. It was about the size, shape and color of a football. I remembered that when I was a flying instructor a fellow had ejected from his plane and broken his thigh. He had gone into shock, the blood had pooled in his leg, and he died, which came as quite a surprise to usa man dying of a broken leg.
Then I realized that a very similar thing was happening to me.
"When I saw it, I said to the guard, `O.K., get the officer.''
"An officer came in after a few minutes. It was the man that we came to know very well as `The Bug.'' He was a psychotic torturer, one of the worst fiends that we had to deal with. I said, `O.K., I''ll give you military information if you will take me to the hospital.''"
GOOGLE:
MCCAIN COLLABORATOR
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by TheMasses1 at 05:03 PM
======================================================
SO classy and clever of you.....fool.
Screechy lies and libels from paid McCain bloggers. I hope you''re all wearing two layers of your adult diapers on the 4th....
Posted by TheMasses1 at 05:03 PM : Oct 29, 2008
You would know this because Biden has been all up in Mrs. TheMasses1.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by LDVUONG at 03:42 PM : Oct 29, 2008
All of the candidates will be getting on the job training. McCain has no executive experience and neither does palin or Biden. So enough with the "no experience" rhetorical schtick. And as far as tie ins go two names are enough to equal the all the bad guy associations for Obama put together and those names are bush and cheney who are the crookedest lying terrorists since hitler and stalin.
Biden says Mrs. TheMasses1 is pretty good once he gets past the used part.
Posted by wimpleman at 05:13 PM : Oct 29, 2008
Wow, there''s an intelligent statement. Try this math:
(America - (Carbou Barbie + Mcsame)) = America^2
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
...
- 8
- next
See all 385 Comments