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Campaigns Heat Up In The Home Stretch

Battling to prevent Republican losses, President George W. Bush said Saturday that Democrats are determined to raise taxes and would damage the economy if they gain control of Congress. Democrats, meanwhile, kept up their assault on the president's Iraq policy.

In a partisan pre-election message, Bush said, "The choice you make on Tuesday will have a direct impact on our economy, on the small businesses that are creating jobs and on the workers who depend on them.

"The last thing American families and small businesses need now is a higher tax bill," Bush said in his weekly radio address, delivered live from a coffee shop in suburban Denver. "And that is what you'll get if the Democrats take control of the Congress."

Democrat Lois Murphy, who is fighting for the right to represent Pennsylvania in the House, gave the Democratic radio response but focused on the war.

"No matter how bad Iraq gets or how many respected Americans say that our strategy is not working ... our president and his Republican Congress have promised not to change a thing if they are returned to power," Murphy said.





Murphy, a lawyer, is challenging Republican Rep. Jim Gerlach, a two-term incumbent from suburban Philadelphia whom she nearly beat in 2004. Their rematch is considered one of the nation's most competitive races.

Murphy has said the Iraq war has made America less safe and Congress should demand that President Bush present a comprehensive plan for success. Gerlach has accused her of being inconsistent in her support for U.S. troops in Iraq.

In other news from the campaign trail:

  • In Maryland, U.S. Rep. Ben Cardin and Republican Lt. Gov. Michael Steele are locked in a very tight and racially charged race to succeed retiring Democratic Senator Paul Sarbanes.
  • Conservatives support for the war in Iraq continues to fade. Richard Perle – a leading neo-conservative proponent of the U.S.-led invasion – now says U.S. policy there has failed. The Army Times and other military-oriented periodicals will publish editorials calling for Mr. Bush to fire Donald Rumsfeld.
  • Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, whose job entails promoting U.S. aims abroad, is doing her part for the Republican party on the home front. Rice, the most popular member of President Bush's cabinet, is selling the administration line on Iran, North Korea and Iraq in a string of interviews with conservative radio and television hosts. Rice did 12 interviews in 11 days through Friday, an unusually busy schedule when she is not traveling.
  • Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio, who pleaded guilty last month in the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling investigation, resigned from Congress on Friday. House Republicans had threatened to expel Ney if he didn't quit by the time lawmakers returned to Washington after Tuesday's elections. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Ney's resignation four days before the elections was late.
  • Missouri Democrat Claire McCaskill pulled an all-nighter in her campaign for the Senate. Scrambling for votes before Tuesday's election against Republican Sen. Jim Talent, she made more than 30 stops over 24 straight hours.

    Long locked out of power, Democrats appear poised to win control of the House and possibly the Senate in midterm elections this week amid a national clamor for change after four years of war in Iraq.

    Democrats also are on track to replace Republican governors in several states, New York, Ohio and Massachusetts among them. Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger seems safely on his way to a first full term in California, the most populous state.

    Six years after President Bush took office and with his poll ratings at no better than 40 percent, all 435 House seats are on the ballot, as well as 33 Senate and 36 gubernatorial races. Voters in 37 states settled the fate of ballot initiatives, deciding whether to raise the minimum wage, ban gay marriage, endorse expanded embryonic stem cell research and — in South Dakota — impose the country's most stringent abortion restrictions.

    State legislative and local races by the thousands filled out the ballots in nearly every county.

    The elections counted as the costliest ever, with spending expected to reach $2.6 billion, much of it paying for caustic television commercials.

    Republicans are counting on their get-out-the-vote operation and a late save-the-majority tour by Bush to limit their losses.

    A dozen years after Republicans gained power in a landslide, strategists in both parties as well as public and private polls say Democrats are on the cusp of taking it back.

    Democrats must gain 15 seats to make Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California the first woman speaker in history, and national surveys showed Democrats running ahead of Republicans in hypothetical ballot tests on a scope not seen since 1990. In a late October Associated Press-AOL News poll, 56 percent of likely voters sided with Democrats and 37 percent with Republicans. The 19 percentage-point gap was nearly double the 10-point spread in a survey a few weeks earlier.

    At the same time, the poll suggested that not everyone's mind was fully made up — far from it. About 38 percent of likely voters said they either had not made a final decision or could change their intentions before casting their ballots.

    Still, among Republicans and Democrats alike, there was open speculation about the size of the majority the Democrats would command.

    "A miracle day for us would be 14 seats lost," said Joe Gaylord, who was the chief strategist for Newt Gingrich in 1994 when Republicans swept to power. "A good day would be around minus 20, and a bad day would be over 30."

    He said dissatisfaction was evident with the Republican job performance among all parts of the GOP coalition, social conservatives, economic conservatives and foreign policy conservatives.

    Democrats shunned ebullient predictions, recalling false optimism of previous elections. But several strategists said this time was different. In the past, "we were trying to contrive a message of change, and so we would lose. This time, the political environment held from January through November," said John Anzalone, a Democratic pollster advising Sheldon Whitehouse, favored to win a Senate race in Rhode Island, as well as numerous House contenders in close races.

    "I've said all along there's going to be three dozen very hotly contested seats," said Rep. Tom Reynolds, R-N.Y., chairman of the House campaign committee, who noted that he has said for months that Republicans have campaigned all year with "the wind in our face."

    Based on polling and the record sums the House GOP committee and its Democratic counterpart have spent on advertising, the list of competitive races far exceeds three dozen.

    The struggle for the Senate, where Democrats need to gain six seats for control, seemed less predictable. "I'm both feeling good and nervous," said Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, head of the Democratic campaign organization. "I wouldn't say we're going to take back the Senate and I wouldn't say we're not."

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