AP: Obama's Pitch: Fire GOP, Hire Me

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CHARLES BABINGTON | September 6, 2008 12:58 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential candidate Sen., John McCain, R-AZ.,and his vice presidential running mate Alaska Gov., Sarah Palin acknowledge the cheers of supporters at the start of a campaign rally Friday afternoon, Sept. 5, 2008 in Sterling Heights, MI. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

DURYEA, Pa. — The challenge for Barack Obama is to make himself acceptable enough to disgruntled voters eager to toss Republicans from the White House if they see a comfortable, competent alternative.

A presidential election with two months left could turn on it.

President Bush, though not on the ballot, has overshadowed this election from the start. His approval ratings are hovering at record lows, and Democrats have done all they can to tie John McCain to him so tightly that they look like one person.

The Obama camp wants Nov. 4 to be a referendum on the Bush presidency, the closest they can come to running against the incumbent. In such elections, challengers must persuade most voters to do two things: Be open to firing the incumbent and agree the challenger is acceptable. If they succeed at both, the incumbent _ or in this case, presumably, his party _ loses.

With Bush so unpopular and millions of voters seemingly bent on making all Republicans pay, McCain must tackle both questions. He has tried to distance himself from Bush without infuriating the GOP base, going so far as to run a TV ad saying, "We're worse off than we were four years ago."

In his acceptance speech at the Republican convention, he cast himself as an agent of change, urging Americans to "fight with me" for a new direction. Republicans privately acknowledge it could be a tough sell to voters who see McCain as part of the Republican establishment.

That's when McCain and his surrogates urge voters to reject Obama on the second question, his fitness for the job. No matter how angry they are at Bush and the Republican Party, this argument goes, Obama is too inexperienced, unknown and unpredictable for them to gamble on.

They might vote for McCain unenthusiastically, but it's better than no vote at all.

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That's why Republicans have belittled Obama's experience for months. He accomplished little in the U.S. Senate and Illinois Legislature, they say, a claim Obama disputes.

Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin this week ridiculed Obama's post-college work as a community organizer in Chicago, a job she described as lacking responsibilities. Convention keynote speaker Rudy Giuliani said Obama "has never led anything," adding, "This is no time for on-the-job training."

Such attacks may be hitting a mark, as voters have shown uncertainty about Obama for months. In a USA Today-Gallup Poll conducted Aug. 21-23, before the party conventions, 55 percent of voters gave the Democratic Party a favorable rating, while 39 percent felt positive about the Republican Party, a 16-point spread. But in the latest daily tracking poll by Gallup, Obama's lead over McCain was only 4 percentage points.

Like McCain, Obama pushes hard on both parts of the two-prong question. The first is easier for him. McCain, when battling for his party's nomination, acknowledged supporting Bush's positions 90 percent of the time in the Senate. Obama never lets voters forget it.

"John McCain has a set of ideas that are identical to George Bush's," he told Ohio voters this week.

The second part _ making undecided voters comfortable with the idea of him as president _ is more challenging. With less than four years of Senate service, much of it spent running for president, Obama's legislative record is comparatively slim. He makes the most of it, noting his work on congressional ethics and a bipartisan effort to regulate nuclear weapons in former Soviet countries.

Obama, 47, spends more time telling voters that his judgment, proposals and ability to unite people are superior, and worthy of the Oval Office. His early opposition to the Iraq war was central to his primary victory over Hillary Rodham Clinton, and now he's turning it against McCain.

"John McCain was a cheerleader for us to go into Iraq," Obama told a crowd in Lancaster, Pa., on Thursday. "He was wrong and I was right."

Obama implores voters not to fall for Republican "scare tactics" that suggest he is unacceptably inexperienced and non-mainstream. Speaking Friday to workers in Duryea he said he knows some voters are tempted to say to themselves, "I don't know. The guy hasn't been there that long in Washington. You know, he's got a funny name. We're not sure about him."

When a top McCain aide recently said the election would turn on personalities more than issues, Obama said, "What they're really saying is, 'We're going to try to scare people about Barack. So we're going to say that, you know, maybe he's got Muslim connections. Or we're going to say that, you know, he hangs out with radicals, or he's not patriotic.' Just making stuff up."

Perhaps the campaign's biggest mystery is something Obama did not explicitly address: What portion of voters will reject him because of his race, even if they tell friends and pollsters it's not a concern, and even if they are deeply unhappy with Bush?

If the number is large in key states, it could tip the election to McCain. Even if Obama prevails on the first question facing undecided voters, he might fall short on the second.

He seems keenly aware of the danger.

"They're trying to make you unsure about me," he told the Duryea workers. They won't be sorry, he promised, "if you give me this opportunity."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Charles Babington covers politics for The Associated Press.

DURYEA, Pa. — The challenge for Barack Obama is to make himself acceptable enough to disgruntled voters eager to toss Republicans from the White House if they see a comfortable, competent altern...
DURYEA, Pa. — The challenge for Barack Obama is to make himself acceptable enough to disgruntled voters eager to toss Republicans from the White House if they see a comfortable, competent altern...
 
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Fellow Democrats and Obama supporters, let us not get caught up in the heat of these stupid comments by people trying to create issues where there are none. The Republicans know they cannot win this election and will do anything to take us off our course and goal of assuring that Obama becomes the 44th President of the United States of America. So forget their smears and lies, which are not true. We need to go out there and campaign for our candidate. Convert those independents and undecided voters and get them on to Obama"s tickets. We don"t need to waste our time responding to this rubbish - our time should be spent on the campaign trail. A lot of bloggers and people making comments are just pretending to be Democrats or PUMA supporters or even Republicans who are just working to incite and create issues and friction. Obama has shown us how to handle these issues - with calm and dignity. Come On Dems, don"t get caught up in this BS. McCain and Palin are just another bump on the road, which we will flatten.
YES WE CAN!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 AM on 09/08/2008

What does it say of these people who intend to vote for McCain, after observing the awful
state of affairs in America through these last eight years of Rethug political schemes, with many in prison or kicked out of office.
Name one good or positive thing or event happening other than endless lies, corrupt officials, homosexual sex scandals, mortgage crises, bank failures, wars, disasters, etc, etc, etc,
whether man made or from mother nature. This is an intelligent universe after all and anyone not tuned in to it should have their voting privileges taken away like they do with incarcerated individuals.

The mindset of these people are stupendous when an individuals Race is put ahead of plain common sense of the rebuilding of America and regaining respect around the world in every Nation with a profound desire to see it as a respected friend and leader again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 09/07/2008

Barack & Joe tonite on 60 Minutes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 09/07/2008

I believe everbody here has good reasons to vote for Obama/Biden. The fact of the matter remains, if you do not get up and vote on election day then all your comments and opinions are in vain. If you are willing to talk the talk, then you must walk the walk to the polls, and end the reign of the Republicans. Truth of the matter is, McCain is a Republican. The same party that has scoundered money from the poor to give to the rich. The same party who has brought us into war, with no end in sight. The same party that gives tax breaks to the oil companies who in turn make money, and then charge everyone at the pump $4 a gallon. The oil companies make even more money. The same party who thinks health insurance is a priviledge and not a right. The same party who gives companies tax breaks to ship jobs overseas. The same party who wants us to keep drilling for oil while rejecting any other forms of energy independence. The same party who is willing to leave the country in the hands of a woman who has scandal written all over here name. After 25 years in the Senate, McCain has not changed and now he is asking for you to believe him to change. When you vote for Bush 89% of the time, where is the change? Republicans think we are dumb, but are we?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 09/07/2008

Obama's analyses and proposals have become and engine that drives the "train" to pull us out of some of the messes that Bush and the neo-conservatives got us into. McCain/Palin is the caboose.

McCain isn't adding to the momentum of progress, he's dragging behind, trying to pull us back into the 1950's "duck and cover" era of fear.

I shudder to think what will happen to this country if he were to prevail.

Cut the caboose loose.
Obama/Biden '08.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 AM on 09/07/2008

Great. With the current unemployment rate, Obama wants to fire MORE people? Factory workers, teachers, computer programmers. These people can find new jobs, but Republican lawmakers? They have no marketable skills. They may even have to go back to their first wives when the money runs out and the new wives realize they can do better. And just think of the trickle-down job losses for lawyers, lobbyists and prostitutes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 09/07/2008

Many Republican women are voting Obama based on Palin's views on women's issues - like right to a choice, not very many women want that taken away. I just hope the fear mongers do not get to everyone else. I just hope he gets in and CAN actually make change in a system that is so stuck. I watched sicko and it is sicko how are gov't has been for a long time concerning health care and raising our young. I hope he can do something and not get sucked up into the vacuum

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 AM on 09/07/2008

666!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:08 PM on 09/06/2008

How can Barack Obama say that when all good conservatives know that the only rational alternative to the republican party is the republican party?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 PM on 09/06/2008

Rational?

One definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result.

Voting republican is no longer a "rational alternative" it's an insane one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 09/06/2008

There is nothing rational about the republican party. They are party bent on brainwashing and fearmongering.

Why do you think some of those out in the country that are dirt poor and have almost nothing to look for in life keep voting Republican? Yet Republicans have been in power for so long with nothing to show for. Fear is the only thing that drives people to vote republican and nothing else. And the people suffer for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 09/07/2008

I find it hard to believe that any voter...republican, democrat, indepenent or unafilliated could even begin to be stupid enough to vote republican.

For a man who is running for president of the united states to reach into a box of cracker jacks and pick the first peanut he runs into is both shocking and appalling. To pick a peanut with so many defects right out of the box only makes it worse.

I watched both the democratic and republican conventions open minded and came away feeling completely disassociated with and repulsed by the repubs. I couldn't vote republican if that was the only thing left. I will take the unknowns with a man of Obama's character and run full speed to the voting booth. If Obama carried the baggage with him that Palin does he would have been crucified beyond your wildest dreams.

Also, I respect what McCain went through as a POW, but was completely turned off by the attention he had others place and he placed upon himself for being a POW. My husband came back from VietNam in a box and there hasn't been a thing mentioned about him since I buried him. Not even from McSame!!! My oldest son is now on his second tour of Iraq thanks to McSame. Going to war is bad enough, but when I heard McCane spew from his own mouth we went to war for oil and then try to dismiss it as a mistake, I was sickened.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 09/06/2008
photo

IEM Traders numbers unchanged after both conventions

http://www.biz.uiowa.edu/news/displaystory.cfm?id=1985

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 09/06/2008
photo

OBAMA-BIDEN 2008!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 09/06/2008

Thanks for the link! I needed the uplift.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 09/06/2008

Time for O to report to the WH for New Prez orientation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 09/06/2008

Fire the liars!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 09/06/2008

OT question...
Anybody know how Sen O voted on the Terri Schivo fiasco?.
He needs to point out that horrible mess was the dam# Repubs that pulled it.
I want the government to leave families alone.
Most people remember how awful that was and Sen O could remind the country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 09/06/2008

Oh oops...nevermind. Sen O voted wrong, but he says he's sorry
and would like to change that vote.
My Bad.
Wonder how McCain voted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:51 PM on 09/06/2008

GOP, YOU ARE FIRED!!!!!!

HERE IS AN ADD FOR O:

>IF YOU LIKE WATCHING YOUR NEIGHBORS SUFFER, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE PAYING $4 A GALLON, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE LOOSING YOUR JOBS, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE HAVING NO HEALTH INSURANCE, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE FOR YOUR GOVERMENT TO LIE TO YOU, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE BIG OIL MAKING 10 BILLION FOR PROFIT EACH QUARTER, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE LOOSING YOUR HOMES WHILE OTHERS CAN EVEN REMEMBER HOW AMNY THEY HAVE, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU LIKE DOUBLE TALK, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU WANT YOUR SS PRIVATIZED, VOTE MCCAIN
> IF YOU WANT YOUR PARENTS TO LOOSE THEIR SS BENEFITS, VOTE MCCAIN
HOWEVER, IF YOU WANT THE TRUTH, IF YOU WANT THIS COUNTRY TO BE TO IT'S GLORY DAY, IF YOU WANT THIS COUNTRY REPECTED AROUND THE WORLD, THIS NOVEMBER, VOTE FOR REAL CHANGE, VOTE OBAMA!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 09/06/2008

If you want to lose the White House, again, run this ad. Why do we do always get the losers on here.
They are going to make us lose again!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 09/06/2008

WTF? I agree with everything rabprevent said. Try reading the post again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 09/06/2008

The "lack-of-experience' issue is really irrevelent particurly considering that Sen. Obama has managed to run a campaign where he was initially considered a longshot to go on to become the frontrunner. That's pretty good for someone with no experience. He obviously has good judgement, excellent management skills and is very intelligent. I believe these and his other positive attributes will make him a fine President.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 09/06/2008

I agree with you. Why don't people see that his ingenuity in breaking fundraising records (raising money through ordinary Americans), his mobilizing of disenchanted youth, his ability to contain leaks in his campaign all showcase his superior emotional and intellectual judgement, and also show that he is able to DO things? What is more difficult, to RAISE millions of dollars as he has done, or to SPEND millions of dollars, as Palin has done? And they talk about his lack of experience!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 PM on 09/06/2008

You forgot a couple. If you like hatefulness, secretiveness, vindictiveness, disagreeableness, and the resulting fist fights, then vote for McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 09/06/2008
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