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McCain-Obama debate prospects uncertain

LIZ SIDOTI | September 25, 2008 11:44 PM EST | AP

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University of Mississippi students Mario Hilliard, left, and Tyler Craft stand in for presidential nominees Barack Obama and John McCain during rehearsals for Friday's scheduled presidential debate at the Ford Center Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008 in Oxford, Miss. The fate of the debate is in doubt as McCain Wednesday suspended his campaign to return to Washington in response to the nation's financial turmoil. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

WASHINGTON — Prospects were questionable at best that John McCain and Barack Obama would meet Friday for their first presidential debate as progress appeared to dissolve between Congress and the Bush administration on a $700 billion financial industry bailout.

McCain didn't plan to participate in the debate unless there was a consensus. Obama still wants the face-off to go on and was scheduled to travel to the debate site in Oxford, Miss., on Friday.

"I believe that it's very possible that we can get an agreement in time for me to fly to Mississippi," McCain said late Thursday. "I understand how important this debate is and I'm very hopeful. But I also have to put the country first."

In turn, Obama said: "Obviously the biggest priority is making sure that we get this deal done. But I also think it's important to describe to the American people where the next president wants to take the country and how he's going to deal with this crisis."

Both candidates made the rounds on network evening news programs after meeting on the crisis with President Bush and bipartisan congressional leaders at the White House. McCain did not participate in late-night negotiations on Capitol Hill but worked the phones from his Virginia home. A senior McCain official said McCain hasn't signed on to any one proposal, though he agreed there needs to be greater protection for taxpayers.

The debate over the debate is the latest campaign twist as McCain and Obama try to navigate the uncharted politics of the financial meltdown and show leadership at a time of national angst.

In Mississippi, debate organizers continued to prepare, and Gov. Haley Barbour, a Republican, told a news conference he expected the debate to go on. "This is going to be a great debate tomorrow night," Barbour said.

Television networks, too, said they were moving forward.

Presidential politics ran smack into the delicate discussions over how to stop further weakening the sagging economy.

As McCain returned to Washington at midday, Democratic and Republican negotiators emerged from a closed-door meeting to report an agreement in principle. An Obama campaign official said the Illinois senator called into the meeting. McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said McCain didn't participate, but held talks with Republican leaders afterward.

A few hours later, the rivals attended the private White House meeting. They sat three seats away from the president, McCain to his right, Obama to his left. As the meeting broke up, it became apparent that any tentative agreement had started to dissolve.

Afterward, Obama said he tried to understand the objections to the approach being taken by congressional leaders and the Bush administration.

"The question I asked was, 'Well, do we need to start from scratch or are there ways to incorporate some of those concerns?'" Obama said. "At this point the president, the secretary of the Treasury and those who are expressing some of these concerns have to provide some clarity."

Several Republicans and Democrats briefed on the White House meeting said House Republican Leader John Boehner raised the concerns of some of his rank and file about the emerging plan, and McCain urged cooperation by all parties to craft a compromise proposal.

McCain said he knew going in to the meeting that progress wasn't as far along as it seemed.

"There never was a deal, but I do believe the meeting was important to move the process along," McCain said. "It gave us a renewed sense of urgency and I'm confident we will move forward, and I'm confident that we will reach a conclusion."

Obama, for his part, held a news conference at a Washington hotel and suggested McCain was part of the problem.

"I'm not clear that in a very difficult situation like this that doing things in the spotlight and injecting presidential politics is necessarily useful," Obama said.

Later, McCain's campaign issued a statement that said the White House meeting "devolved into a contentious shouting match" and implied Obama was at fault. Democrats differed.

As the day began, McCain portrayed his announced halt to campaign events, fundraising and advertising as an example of putting the country before politics. But in doing so he also hoped to get political credit for a decisive step on a national crisis as polls show him trailing Obama on the economy and slipping in the presidential race.

And politics continued on all sides nonetheless.

Despite McCain's stated hiatus, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, visited memorials in lower Manhattan to those killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and McCain aides appeared on news programs. Chief strategist Steve Schmidt said all television advertising was "down." But a McCain ad was later seen on local television in Las Vegas, and perhaps elsewhere.

Industry officials said Obama's campaign was inquiring about buying airtime made available where McCain was absent.

Schmidt said Obama was acting in "politically predatory fashion" by seeking McCain's abandoned air time. But Obama spokesman Bill Burton called Schmidt's claim "categorically false."

Burton also derided McCain's claim to have halted activity as a political stunt, saying: "John McCain hasn't suspended his campaign, he only wants us to suspend disbelief."

Obama, for his part, didn't curtail any of his campaign activities.

In fact, the Democrat also rolled out a new 60-second, TV ad in which he cited economic policies endorsed by Bush and McCain as essentially to blame for the troubles.

"For eight years we've been told that the way to a stronger economy was to give huge tax breaks to corporations and the wealthiest. Cut oversight on Wall Street. And somehow all Americans would benefit," Obama says in the ad. "Well now we know the truth."

___

Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn, Nedra Pickler, Christopher Wills and Beth Fouhy contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Prospects were questionable at best that John McCain and Barack Obama would meet Friday for their first presidential debate as progress appeared to dissolve between Congress and the...
WASHINGTON — Prospects were questionable at best that John McCain and Barack Obama would meet Friday for their first presidential debate as progress appeared to dissolve between Congress and the...
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11:47 AM on 09/26/2008
Well the discussion if McCain will or will not show up keeps the news from reporting about McCain's rapidly dropping poll numbers.
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dmspeech
09:01 AM on 09/26/2008
Have you seen Palin on Katie Couric? I think this is a ploy to keep her from having to debate. McCain is so damn transparent.
08:49 AM on 09/26/2008
MCCAIN MUST SHOW UP!
He cannot risk not showing up (pardon the double negative) as that will completely erode whatever sliver of credibility as a leader he still embodies.

Is he afraid of being bested by Obama? He was all of the UN Ambassador this week as he had to shepherd his V.P. around on her faux world tour sans passport, all the while Obama was diligently preparing and campaigning in Florida. Did McCain get a chance to prepare? I guess not as much as he now wishes he did, hence the cold feet.

Maybe if he gets to hide behind this economic crisis and postpones this debate, he could practice and reschedule for Oct. 2 thereby displacing the impending debacle of his V.P. showing the world how unprepared she is, and how poor a selection he made.

Whatever the reason, he has to show up because nothing is worse than his absence in Obama's presence tonight in Oxford.

P.S.: no open book tests here so absolutely NO remote locations via satellite. Get your **s down to Mississippi, McCain. Be a man and fight!
01:22 AM on 09/26/2008
Yup, anything to change the subject... Bet next week it will be all about Palin's pet moose...
01:36 AM on 09/26/2008
McCainwinkle Moose: "Watch me pull a rabbit of my {hat}."
Voters: "Agaaain? That trick never works!"
McCainwinkle: "Nothing up ma sleeve!"

Voters: Obviously.
02:17 AM on 09/26/2008
"No doubt about it - I gotta get another hat!"
01:18 AM on 09/26/2008
McCain CLAIMED he SUSPENDED his campaign ................. He CLAIMED the he STOPPED all of his ads etc.

So I don't blame the Obama campaign for seeking to buy those SUPPOSED SUSPENDED air time spots .................... A SMART MOVE.

But why is McCain complaining ....................... IF HE REALLY HAS SUSPENDED HIS CAMPAIGN, THE FACT THAT THE OBAMA CAMPAIGN SOUGHT TO USE THOSE AVAILABLE SPOTS SHOULD NOT MATTER TO HIM ONE BIT....................

THAT IS UNLESS McCAIN WAS LYING TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ALL ALONG.

McCain can't have it both ways ................. Either he is NOT campaigning at the moment, or HE IS A LIAR ......................... You be the judge.
12:51 AM on 09/26/2008
There would be several benefits for McCain if he decides to show up at the last minute, and that's probably the idea (and why he's disrupted negotiations on a delicate issue to keep things up in the air):

1) Lower the number of viewers. If everyone thinks that the debates are canceled, fewer people tune in. It's Friday night, and a lot of people could probably think of something better to do. If fewer people tune in, how well Obama did in the debate is a question of spin and media sound bites. Fox News can safely declare McCain the winner no matter what, knowing that the majority of their viewers didn't actually see it.

2) Lower expectations. It's hard to get expectations much lower than "at least I showed up."
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
12:48 AM on 09/26/2008
What a sad old man. He's in over his head and I think he knows that now.
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JTJMOMEDTEK
vote out global warming deniers
12:43 AM on 09/26/2008
MCCain never debated a smart person before. He's scared poopless!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SoCalNick
Former 99er, Business Owner, Proud Veteran 101st
12:08 AM on 09/26/2008
McCain will fake a coronary next in order to stay away from that stage.
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Gib
My micro-bio is empty
12:07 AM on 09/26/2008
It seems to me that McCain had to obstruct agreement on the bailout in order to avoid the debate. He has to put his campaign first.