Güncelleme Tarihi:
After Hillary Clinton's exit from the primary race and fulsome endorsement of Obama Saturday, supporters of the Democrat and his Republican rival hammered two of the defining themes for the presidential election: the economy and
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"The fact is that John McCain voted 95 percent of the time with (President) George Bush last year, and 90 percent of the time with George Bush over the entire presidency," said John Kerry, the Democrats defeated nominee in 2004.
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"That’s not a change. That’s not reform. That’s not a difference," the
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McCain backers cast Obama as a tax-and-spend liberal whose first instinct was to thrust big government into every corner of
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"When it comes to Senator Obama, its all talk," South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham said.
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"(He) never did anything the left didn’t want to hear, whether
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But Obama, 46, is not ceding the centrist electorate that could well decide who succeeds Bush, who officially stands down in January.
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On Monday Obama launches a two-week, nationwide economic tour starting in
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The tour takes Obama Tuesday to
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Both candidates rolled out biographical television spots to re-introduce themselves to voters after the grueling primary season.
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Obama’s story is of a mixed-race trailblazer who, he says, personifies hope and the American dream. McCain, 71, is the grizzled veteran and war hero who survived five years of torture during captivity in
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Opinion polls indicate that more than 80 percent of Americans believe the country is going in the wrong direction -- a signal of a problem for the party in power.
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"The atmospherics for the Republicans haven’t been this bad since 1974," said former McCain adviser John Weaver.
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"I’ve looked at every other possible candidate. No one brings to a ticket what Hillary brings," said California Senator Dianne Feinstein, who hosted a fence-mending meeting between the two Democrats on Thursday.
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"Senator Clinton said she will do whatever she is asked to do to elect Barack Obama. She’s not seeking the job and it is Senator Obama’s decision, solely his decision," he told CNN.
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There was praise meanwhile for
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"She knocked it out of the park yesterday with her speech,"
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"And the match-up between Senator McCain and Senator Obama couldn’t be more clear," he said, adamant that Democratic wounds would heal in time for the November 4 election.