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McCain Lags Obama In Ohio, Struggles To Gain Ground

DOUGLAS BIRCH | October 30, 2008 11:42 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., salutes to the crowd at a rally at Mentor High School in Mentor, Ohio, Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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WASHINGTON — With the presidential race in its final days, Republican John McCain campaigned across Ohio, struggling to gain ground against Democrat Barack Obama in a state that the Republican must win to have a chance of capturing the White House.

With just five days to go before the election, Obama sought to expand his lead in the polls by campaigning against McCain in states that have voted Republican in recent elections, including Florida, Virginia and Missouri.

McCain meanwhile spent a day riding a campaign bus through a single, critical swing state, Ohio, because if he loses there, he will have almost no chance of getting the 270 electoral votes he needs to win the presidency.

McCain says he relishes the role of underdog, and has pulled off come-from-behind wins in the past. He spent part of Thursday in an Ohio town called Defiance, and during the day blasted the media's skeptical assessment of his chances in Tuesday's election.

"The pundits have written us off, just as they've done several times before," he said. "We're a few points down, but we're coming back."

The latest national poll released Thursday, the CBS-NY Times national poll, put Obama and Joe Biden at 52 percent, McCain and Sarah Palin at 39 percent. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percent.

Obama, who spent millions blanketing the television networks with a paid political appeal Wednesday night, continued to hammer home his message that the U.S. needs to change course.

"When the polls close on Tuesday, you don't want to say to yourself, 'Here's something I didn't do, here's an argument I didn't make, here's a hand I didn't shake,'" Obama said in an interview with ABC television, broadcast Thursday.

By most independent evidence, on the Thursday before Election Day the race was Obama's to lose.

National polls showed the Democrat with a substantial lead nationwide, and he was rated the favorite in a half-dozen states that sided with President Bush in 2004. Surveys showed him in close races in three more.

Two new polls released Thursday showed the candidates tied in the once reliably Republican state of Indiana.

Obama, who is seeking to become the nation's first black president, has raised hundreds of millions of dollars more than McCain.

And he has used that advantage to draw votes in traditionally Republican areas, forcing McCain to spend precious time and money defending his home turf.

Obama's campaign has approached Illinois Rep. Rahm Emanuel about possibly serving as White House chief of staff, Democratic campaign officials said Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity.

After spending part of Thursday in Florida and Virginia, Obama was headed for a rally in Columbia, Missouri as part of his political endgame.

Missouri, in the Midwest, is considered a political bellwether for the rest of the country. Voters there have voted for the winner in every U.S. presidential contest since 1956.

The Republican vice presidential candidate, Sarah Palin, also was in Missouri on Thursday. She spoke in the Mississippi River city of Cape Girardeau, where she said Obama would be an "untested Commander in Chief." She described herself and McCain as outsiders who would bring reform and help get the economy back on track.

Obama's vice presidential candidate, Joe Biden, appeared Thursday in an area of Missouri hit hard by layoffs at a local Chrysler automotive plant, and mocked Palin and McCain for calling themselves political mavericks.

"You cannot call yourself a maverick when all you've been for the last eight years is a sidekick," Biden said. "They are the Bush administration's sidekicks."

Obama on Thursday also sought to shackle McCain to the policies of President Bush, whose popularity has plummeted as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have dragged on and the U.S. economy has stumbled.

The candidate compared the White House to a car, and said McCain was waiting to take the wheel from Bush and continue to steer the country down a dead-end.

"After nine straight months of job losses, the largest drop in home values on record, wages lower than they've been in a decade, why would we keep driving down this dead-end street?" Obama said.

As evidence, Obama pointed to federal data released Thursday showing that the economy _ the world's largest, generating about one fifth of global gross domestic product _ shrank in the third quarter of the year.

U.S. consumers, meanwhile, cut back on their spending by the biggest amount in 28 years.

McCain, in Ohio, also seized on new data _ in this case reports of record profits by Exxon Mobil Corp. _ to point out that in the U.S. Senate Obama voted for new tax breaks for the oil industry.

"I voted against it," the Arizona Republican said. "When I'm president, we're not going to let that happen."

McCain was likely referring to Obama's 2005 vote on a Republican-crafted energy bill. Obama and other Democrats supported the bill after major tax breaks for alternative energy and conservation were added.

Both campaigns have invested heavily in turning out early voters, with Obama expected to reap the most votes.

According to Dr. Michael P. McDonald of George Mason University, 17.5 million Americans have already cast ballots under provisions for early voting, about 14 percent of the 124 million cast in the 2004 elections.

But the campaign has generated such intense interest that some experts are still predicting long lines at the polls on election day.

Officials in North Carolina said roughly 30 percent of all registered voters had already cast ballots _ about 1.7 million in all. But the Board of Elections has ordered the state's 100 counties to keep longer voting hours.

Both Republicans and Democrats are voting early. But officials in Iowa, Florida, Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada as well as North Carolina said more Democrats that Republicans had cast ballots, in some cases by lopsided margins.

The political attacks on Obama have intensified as the election has approached.

An automated phone call blitz by McCain's campaign in Illinois is trying to revive the issue of Obama's ties to a convicted felon, claiming the Democrat hasn't fully explained the relationship.

WASHINGTON — With the presidential race in its final days, Republican John McCain campaigned across Ohio, struggling to gain ground against Democrat Barack Obama in a state that the Republican m...
WASHINGTON — With the presidential race in its final days, Republican John McCain campaigned across Ohio, struggling to gain ground against Democrat Barack Obama in a state that the Republican m...
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06:09 AM on 11/01/2008
I live in Dayton,Ohi­o and after watching the 2004 election and feeling as though I witnessed the election again stolen from us in Ohio(Ken Blackwell) I must say it fells good to be in Ohio now!!!!! PLEASE GET OUT AND VOTE!!! Keep the ball rollin OBAMA/BIDE­N'08!! I can hardly wait till Tuesday.I'­ve already taken Tues. and Wed. off work! I know not to count my chickens before they hatch but I feel like a lot of celebratin­g is coming our way this time!!!!!!­!!!! GOD BLESS US! and GOD BLESS THE USA!
04:38 PM on 10/31/2008
DID ANYBODY CHECK THE OBAMA WEATHERMAN SLEEPER STORY?
03:13 PM on 10/31/2008
YAY! I just voted for OBAMA in Indiana!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
07:09 PM on 10/31/2008
Felt good didn't it? I voted for Obama in Virginia on October 24th!! GOBAMA!!!
08:15 PM on 10/31/2008
and my daughter and I voted for him last week here in Ohio!
02:56 PM on 10/31/2008
The weather will be nice in the Atlanta metro area Tuesday. My kids and I will be at the polls with folding chairs and bottles of water. If you voted early, I BEG you to take the day off (or the two hours allowed by most states) and do the same!!! Please bring whatever you need to get you through the wait, i.e. books, ipod, snack, meds, etc.. No matter what...STA­Y IN LINE!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!


Nov 4 - Partly Cloudy - 67°/49° (Go to www.weathe­r.com and enter your zip code to check for the weather in you location. Do a 10-day outlook.)

GA early voters, check here to make sure your vote was counted!! http://www­.sos.georg­ia.gov/ele­ctions/pol­llocator/P­ollLocator­.aspx
10:11 AM on 10/31/2008
Do not rest people. This will be lost ONLY if we decide to let them take it from us. GET EVERYONE YOU KNOW to VOTE!!!!
09:09 AM on 10/31/2008
Take NOTHING for granted! WORK HARD AND GOTV!
08:37 AM on 10/31/2008
McCain is a ghoul of a man, very bitter and envious of Sen. Obama and disrespect­s all women.
09:09 AM on 10/31/2008
AGREED!
08:33 AM on 10/31/2008
mccain knocks obama re educating youngsters about protection from sex predators, and at the same time, buses in 4000 kids, to listen to one of his hate-fille­d, racist rallies.
wow - what a fella!
so principled­! so caring!
by the way, what is the legal position on this? did the school superinten­dent act illegally in using school assetts (buses/tea­chers etc) to benefit a politician­? did the super break the law by allowing under-age kids to attend a political rally in school time?
or did he close the schools at the request of mccain?
no matter which way you look at it, the whole thing stinks.
mccain is lucky it wasn't my kid - he'd be one sore and sorry fella by now!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blaqntelligence
12:21 PM on 10/31/2008
My question is: Did he, or the school, get the PARENT'S permission for their little shindig?
Considerin­g the mob mentality of those rallies, what if a child had gotten hurt?
Or became afraid?
Were there any procedures in place?
According to the report I read, mccain's camp "emptied" three local schools.
Was this planned? Or was it (like all his other "brilliant­" "mavericky­" ideas) a poorly-tho­ught-out, Hail Mary, desperatio­n attempt?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
07:11 PM on 10/31/2008
It was just that.....d­esparation­. He bussed those kids in so that the rally would be crowded because the local big city press would be there. Plain and simple child abuse.
07:36 AM on 10/31/2008
II saw today that among McCain's last ditch efforts is the release of an ad where Obama praises McCain. Bingo. That's the point. Since his speech at the 2004 convention­, Obama has said there are no red states or blue states but only UNITED states. He's therefore secure enough to give praise where praise is due, even to those with whom he would often disagree. It's McCain who's too insecure to run on his own message of a better future and must resort to personal attacks that give empowermen­t to the worst elements in Ohio and elsewhere in an effort to win the White House. McCain boasts of being bipartisan­ship and of his ability to reach across the aisle, and then slams Obama for exhibiting such behavior, not just talking about it.
07:47 AM on 10/31/2008
McCain has demonstrat­ed how small a person he is throughout this campaign. Obama has taken the high road.
07:03 AM on 10/31/2008
When McCain spoke in Defiance, Ohio, he needed a crowd of supporters to cheer his every word. After busing in loads of kids from closed schools, he had his cheering crowd of "supporter­s". Of course, these kids cannot vote and most likely many of their parents will vote for either candidate.

Also, when McCain called upon "Joe the plumber" to step up/out on stage, he was nowhere to be seen. He abandoned McCain.

McCain couldn't even get enough voting age Republican­s in Dayton (at the 3300-seat Trent Arena in Kettering, on the Fairmont High School campus) to appear without having the Kettering school district allow the kids out for the day. There were not thousands of people wishing McCain good luck, waving at his motorcade (as has occurred with Obama). In fact, many of us waiting at a major local intersecti­on for the motorcade to pass, had Obama stickers on our cars.

Biden is set to appear at the same venue in Kettering today (Friday) as McCain did on Monday. Will school officials allow the kids out today, as well?
07:49 AM on 10/31/2008
I think actual supporters will want to see Biden.
I would be furious if my daughter had been forced to attend a MCCain hate-fille­d rally.
12:59 AM on 10/31/2008
This weekend is going to be the big test. Rev. Wright ads will show up as well as attacks against Muslims, Jews, Gays an anyone else not already denigrated­. We need to keep pushing the issues and not get into mudslingin­g like the GOP. It is clear they don't have any focused issues, that they are desperate and will say and do anything. McCain can't even come up with a conherent message for the election?

For those of you who haven't seen it, watch the video (and send it to friends) called Obama's bridge across the world: http://bli­p.tv/file/­1338283. If we don't want to this country be the laughing stock of the world, and have them disrespect us. we need Obama now. Send McCain back to the senate as the old, bitter, angry man that he is.

Taken from another blog and I think is a great idea so pass it on:

On Wednesday, when Obama has been elected, everyone who voted for him should wear or display an American flag. Let's show them who the "real Americans" are! Let's take back this country! Please pass the thought along to all your contacts and we can have a national display.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LemonMeringue
01:54 AM on 10/31/2008
Wear blue on election day! Not red.
02:21 AM on 10/31/2008
Might not be a good idea in certain "pro-ameri­ca" counties.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
07:16 PM on 10/31/2008
That was an amazing video!! World for Obama!! SOOO many people have well wished and hoped for Obama, not just for the United States, but the entire world. He cannot lose. There would be a huge sigh of resignatio­n and loss.
12:41 AM on 10/31/2008
Did I read that right? McCain is robocallin­g in Illinois, Obama's backyard? Wow.
07:50 AM on 10/31/2008
McCain is doing the scatter-sh­ot approach which indicates that he is desperate.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
foxbat
Don't jump to conclusions
09:12 AM on 10/31/2008
Ever see a person that can't swim fall into the deep end of the pool? All that flailing and reaching and grasping with no real focus or plan other than sheer panic? Probably close to the same.

More telling than robocallin­g in Illinois, which Obama leads by 24%+, is that McCain's robocallin­g in his own home state, Arizona, where his lead has dropped from close to 20% at the end of September, to just 4-5% in the recent polling.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
POTUS2008
11:37 PM on 10/30/2008
Everyone thinks Obama is ready to be president and is very smart, savvy, and patriotic, and we all feel like he understand­s us. Right now Obama is the guy we need, and he has made such great choices, and his organizati­on so phenomenal and his supporters so committed; it si clear ti is Obamas time, he's got the votes, and now it is just a question if his supporters all come out and vote or not. I suspect they will.
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labman57
science educator
11:35 PM on 10/30/2008
As Ronald Reagan would say, "here we go again".

One key reason why McCain and Palin are struggling in the polls is that they continue to lack the ability to distinguis­h between negative ads and speeches that attack the opponent's positions from those that attack the person.

At the same time, they have not been able to successful­ly promote their own agenda beyond vague generaliti­es such as being a "maverick" and a "reformer"­.

Obama's campaign from its inception has been much more positive in tone, and when he does attack, it is consistent­ly against the policies and platform rather than the person.

Obama has shown far better judgement in how to run a campaign; this is usually the first good indicator about how the person will run the country.
11:49 PM on 10/30/2008
you are right. obamas campaign has been perfect and mcains has been abominable­. partly because the obama campaign has forced him into defending weak postions from the start. but i think its bigger than that. obama is on the right side of the ideas, mcain is an intellectu­ally broken, moraly deficient republican
11:19 PM on 10/30/2008
I love my smart wise Obamians,
11:48 PM on 10/30/2008
:-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
07:19 PM on 10/31/2008
:-):-):-):­-):-):-):-­)