News


Print this story | | Comment (No comments posted.) | Rate | Text Size

Obama uses McCain’s lead as case for his own candidacy

AP Photo | Jim Mone
Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill, appears at a rally Target Center on Saturday in Minneapolis.

By Nedra Pickler, The Associated Press
Published: Sunday, February 3, 2008 1:10 PM MST


LOS ANGELES—Democratic Sen. Barack Obama sees one of the best arguments for his presidential candidacy in the rise of Republican Sen. John McCain.

McCain has become Obama’s favorite punching bag, an easier mark in front of partisan audiences than the rival Obama will have to beat first to get to the general election — Hillary Rodham Clinton. But he also likes to lump the two of them together as co-supporters of the war in Iraq.

“It is time for new leadership that understands the way to win a debate with John McCain or any Republican who is nominated is not by nominating someone who agreed with him on voting for the war in Iraq,” Obama said during a speech in Denver on Wednesday.

The pitch is a timely pivot back to the issue that helped fuel Obama’s candidacy — h 0s early opposition to Iraq. Recently the war has become a secondary issue to the declining economy — an issue on which Clinton outdistances Obama in the polls as the more experienc ed hand to guide the nation though financial turmoil.

Asked about Obama’s criticism Friday, McCain said a debate with Obama over the war “will be the difference between victory and surrender.”

“Without in any way denigrating or in any way being critical of Senator Obama, who I have great respect for, it’s a product of his inexperience,” McCain told reporters on his campaign plane.


“And we’ll be highlighting that. And, inexperience, a lack of knowledge of national security issues can only lead one to the conclusion, that you would have immediate withdrawal from Iraq.”

McCain noted that Clinton had a similar position and said he eagerly awaits a one-on-one debate with either of them.

Obama advisers have said privately for months that McCain would be their preferred opponent among all those who sought the GOP nomination. They said a race between Obama, 46, and McCain, 71, would provide the starkest contrast between old vs. new, the future versus the past. It’s an argument that Obama also has been using against Clinton, but his campaign feels it would be even stronger against McCain.

Clinton and McCain have worked closely together — one source of their shared reputation for working across party lines on common interests. The two serve on the Armed Services Committee and were drinking buddies at least for a night. The New York Times reported that Clinton challenged McCain to a vodka drinking contest during a congressional trip to Estonia in 2004.

Repeatedly during a debate with Clinton on Thursday night, Obama brought up McCain as if he were the presumptive GOP nominee. McCain has yet to lock up the race, but a recent win in Florida has made him the front-runner.

“I respect that John McCain, in the first two rounds of Bush tax cuts, said it is irresponsible that we have never before cut taxes at the same time as we’re going into war,” Obama said. “And somewhere along the line, the ‘Straight Talk Express’ lost some wheels and now he is in favor of extending Bush tax cuts.”

Later in the debate, he turned to McCain’s position that troops could be in Iraq for the long haul.

“When John McCain suggests that we might be there 100 years, that, I think, indicates a profound lack of understanding that we’ve got a whole host of global threats out there.”

He also argued that he would be more electable in a general election matchup against McCain than Clinton.

“I am attracting new voters and independent voters into the process in a way Clinton cannot do,” Obama said at a news conference.

“I think that’ll be particularly important if Sen. McCain is the nominee on the Republican side.”



Previous   Next
Fire department recommends lock boxes   Wearable art

Article Rating

Current Rating: 0 of 0 votes!Rate File:

Reader Comments

The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of gvnews.com.

Submit a Comment

We encourage your feedback and dialog, all comments will be reviewed by our Web staff before appearing on the Web site.
(optional)
   
Return to: News « | Home « | Top of Page ^
 
Today's Weather
Green Valley, AZ


sponsored by:





Top Menus