Sunday, July 05, 2009

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McCain and Obama trade blows before second debate

Tuesday 07 October 2008

Before the second presidential debate in Nashville, Tennessee, McCain accused Obama of being furtive about his past, and Obama recalled McCain's links to the 1980s saving and loan crisis.

Special Report   The race to the White House

Tuesday 07 October 2008

See what questions FRANCE 24's 10 American voters would ask the candidates.

 

Republican John McCain on Monday accused White House rival Barack Obama of blurring his past and offering no track record to point a way out of America's deepening economic crisis, as new polls showed Democrat Obama commanding a consistent lead.
   
A Gallup survey released Monday found Obama holding a lead over McCain for the tenth straight day, pushing his lead to an eight-point advantage with just 29 days left to the November 4 election.
   
A CNN poll echoed Gallup's findings, with likely voters holding the Illinois senator with a 53 percent lead over 45 percent for McCain.
   
With the stakes rising, campaign tempers are heating up as the candidates head in to Tuesday's "town hall" clash, the second of their three debates.
   
On the eve of their battle in Nashville, Tennessee, McCain said the electioneering was drawing to a close and it was almost time to choose.
   
"The question is: in what direction will we go?" McCain asked a New Mexico rally.
   
"Will our country be a better place under the leadership of the next president -- a more secure, prosperous, and just society?
   
"Will you be better off, in the jobs you hold now and in the opportunities you hope for," he asked.
   
McCain again questioned Obama's readiness for the job, saying: "For a guy who's already authored two memoirs, he's not exactly an open book.
   
"All people want to know is: What has this man ever actually accomplished in government? What does he plan for America? In short: Who is the real Barack Obama?
   
"But ask such questions and all you get in response is another barrage of angry insults."
   
Obama, responding to his portrayal by McCain's campaign as a crony of "terrorists," fought fire with fire by highlighting his opponent's embroilment in a devastating 1980s financial scandal.
   
The Democrat's camp said the Republican was desperately trying to divert attention from his "erratic" handling of the US financial crisis by resorting to character assassination.
   
Speaking to reporters in Asheville, North Carolina, Obama noted that global markets were again plummeting and the contagion was spreading to banks in Europe, and that voters wanted to hear policy solutions during the upcoming debate.
   
So he said he was "surprised" to see an unidentified McCain strategist tell the New York Daily News that "if we keep talking about the economic crisis, we lose."
   
"I've got news for the McCain campaign, the American people are losing right now, they're losing their jobs, they're losing their health care, they're losing their homes, they’re losing their savings," the Democrat said.
   
"I cannot imagine anything more important to talk about than the economic crisis and the notion that we'd want to brush that aside and engage in the usual political shenanigans and scare tactics that have come to characterize too many political campaigns, I think is not what the American people are looking for."
   
The McCain campaign has unleased a blitz of negative ads to cast the Illinois senator as a radical liberal who would endanger the lives of US troops abroad and usher in a new era of interventionist, tax-raising government.
   
For the third day running, the Republican's camp hammered away at Obama's ties to professor of education William Ayers, a bomb-throwing militant during the Vietnam War.
   
Observers say the pair had only a loose relationship in Chicago's milieu of charity and politics.
   
But McCain's running mate Sarah Palin, who is leading the charge, said the Democrat was consorting with an "unrepentant terrorist."
   
Interviewed by African-American radio host Tom Joyner, Obama retorted: "If Senator McCain wants to have a character debate, I am happy to have that debate."
   
Obama rolled out a new broadcast and email onslaught recalling McCain's connection to jailed tycoon Charles Keating, the collapse of whose savings and loan firm wiped out the savings of many elderly retirees.
   
McCain was part of a group of lawmakers known as the "Keating Five" that received gifts and favors from the businessman and intervened with regulators to insist his company was in good health before it collapsed.
   
McCain escaped with a formal censure by the Senate in 1991 but spoke of the searing embarrassment caused by the scandal and went on to become a crusader for ethics reform. Overall, the US government had to spend 124 billion dollars to bail out the entire savings and loan industry.
   

US 2008 election snapshot

  •  Photos: campaign at a glance
  •  The issues: compare the candidates' platforms
  •  US electoral map
 

 

"When you read the fine print, it's clear that John McCain is pulling an old Washington bait and switch. It's a shell game," Obama said of McCain's plan to reform health insurance.

"He gives you a tax credit with one hand but he raises your taxes with the other," the senator from Illinois told a crowd of about 18,000 supporters.

McCain's campaign shot back.

"Barack Obama is lying to voters," McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said in a statement. "It's a bald-faced lie."

Both campaigns say they will improve access to health insurance and make care more affordable. On Saturday, both campaigns derided the other's plan as "radical."

The sharp exchange came as the more than year-long campaign enters the last month before the election.

New polls show Obama has solidified his national lead and gained an edge in crucial battleground states in recent weeks as the Wall Street crisis focused the attention of voters on the economy.

Now, McCain and Obama want to bring voter attention back to their policies and how their visions for America differ.

McCain and Obama will get to talk in person about health insurance and other issues on Tuesday when they meet for the second of three nationally televised presidential debates, this one in Nashville, Tennessee.


With expectations high that the U.S. crisis, which has created turbulence in global financial markets, might tip the world's richest economy into recession, President George W. Bush said Americans should not expect a quick fix.

"My administration will move as quickly as possible, but the benefits of this package will not all be felt immediately," Bush, a Republican whose two terms in office will end in January, said in his weekly radio address.

Responding for the Democrats, Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland said the loss of 760,000 U.S. jobs so far in 2008 showed that ordinary people had felt the pinch of a slowing economy all year and likened McCain to Bush.

"John McCain just doesn't get it. He hasn't said one thing he'd do to make his economy look any different than George Bush's economy," Strickland said.

In Colorado, Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin said she was not concerned about polls showing McCain trailing Obama in many battleground states, including several won by Republicans in the last presidential election in 2004.

Joking that the "heels are off," Palin launched into an aggressive assault on Obama, accusing him of "palling around with terrorists" and calling him an embarrassment.

She cited a New York Times story on Saturday examining Obama's relationship with Bill Ayers, a former member of the Vietnam-era militant Weather Underground organization who is now a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The Times concluded they were not close.

"Our opponent though is someone who sees America, it seems, as being so imperfect, imperfect enough that is he palling around with terrorists who would target their own country?" Palin told a fund-raiser in Englewood, Colorado.

Recent polls show McCain, an Arizona senator, in a dogfight in Ohio, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, Colorado, Missouri and Indiana. All were won by Bush in 2004 and McCain cannot afford to lose them as he tries to piece together the 270 electoral votes needed to capture the White House.

Palin, the governor of Alaska, said she would like the chance to campaign in Michigan, won by Democrat John Kerry in 2004, after McCain announced on Thursday he was pulling staff and advertising from the Midwestern state for the final push to the Nov. 4 election.


 

  • 08/10/2008 05:27:42 Alert a moderator

    Debate winner

    Clearly Obama is the winner on all issues. McCain is to outdated and obviously is not the clear choice for President. He said it himself, He voted with George Bush 90% of the time. We do not need another 4 years of that.

  • 07/10/2008 12:04:16 Alert a moderator

    Palin vs. Biden

    Sarah Palin has exactly voiced the sentiments of middle America's Matriarchal Society. The "Hockey Mom"
    meaningless to we Europeans chimes with values & sentiments held dear by every American "Mater Familias"
    whose similarly forthright opinions will strongly influence the way her family cast their votes. Such a pity Obama
    ran scared of choosing Hillary Clinton as running mate

  • 07/10/2008 05:49:08 Alert a moderator

    I felt Joe Biden won the debate. He talked to the issues.

    Palin did not answer most of the questions. She kept using memorized answers or pre learned ideas and come backs. Then she got cute with "there ya go Joe looking back instead of forward..." She kept droping her gs for ing words and saying , 'You bet ja'

  • 06/10/2008 23:50:59 Alert a moderator

    I suppose gov. Palin and i do have something in common after all

    It is widely known that the week following the dabate, gov, palin had a crash course in int. policy/nat.economics/debate logistics etc. I am a college student and any one who is or was one remembers well a test or paper that was ultimately left until the 11th hour. Lets be candid, that last minute cram session or all niter never really yielded any true comprehension, did it? Rarely could that barely memorized fact become applicable. Her show on thursday was very nice, contained the jargon and points we expected. What worries me is that the well dressed and attractive woman standing on stage had only studiously studied her flash cards and had failed to understand what are huge political concepts with complicated contexts.

  • 06/10/2008 18:53:57 Alert a moderator

    Vice Presidential debate

    Joe Biden said in the debate that F D Roosevelt went on television to reassure the American people after the 1929 stock market crash. What's wrong with this statement? 1. FDR was not President in 1929. 2. Television had not been invented yet! Sarah Palin is WAY smater than Biden.

  • 06/10/2008 14:11:27 Alert a moderator

    VP Debates

    Sarah Palin out performed Joe Biden in the VP debates by a wide margin. She spoke directly to the people intead of using the " Washington Speak" that her opponent used.

  • 06/10/2008 10:22:51 Alert a moderator

    obama/Mc cain/ palin

    sarah palin once more shows us just how immature and void of political experience she is, obama does not hang around with terrorist's, he talks to people who tried to make a change the only way they could. and that is what obama will bring to the U.S....change, mc cain will be another bush clone (nothing will change). who does palin hang round with? machine gun weilding psychos! she is the real enemy from within.

  • 06/10/2008 06:48:14 Alert a moderator

    Palin

    Candidate Palin was terrible from the start to the finish. She managed not to ridicule herself but she avoided questions and her winking was out of place. She didn't sound competent or intelligent at all.

  • 05/10/2008 22:31:58 Alert a moderator

    Palin Vs. Biden: Palin's for real!

    I've seen Joe Biden speak many times over his lengthy senate career, & usually, he's flat out wrong, plagiarizes, or tells mistruths or presents misinformation as factual, as he did recently when he stated, (paraphrase)"FDR went on television after the stock market crash of 1929..." Duh! First off, there was no such thing as TV in 1929; secondly, FDR was not the President of the United States in 1929! And yet, the liberal media presents this huge verbal gaffe as though he's correct! Amazing!

    Sarah Palin, on the other hand, spoke directly to the American people, looking right into the camera---& connecting with us as a regular, yet extraordinary, woman who cares deeply about her country, her fellow citizens & her family. She didn't come across as a "politician": She's for real! And that's why all the liberals--- for example, the CNN panel after the debate---all declared Biden was the winner. Ridiculous! Anyone with common sense---which seems to be sorely lacking in private & public life, worldwide---can see that Sarah Palin is TRUSTWORTHY. She has our best interests at heart, & wants the USA to succeed, to remain the greatest republic the world has ever seen. If you're a mindless Socialist who wants everything done for you by a huge governing body, then the Obama/Biden ticket is for you! If, however, you want to start a small business, choose your own doctors & hospitals, & are able to critically make up your own mind without government intervention, you'll choose to vote for McCain/ Palin on November 4!

  • 05/10/2008 22:28:26 Alert a moderator

    USA need more than a miracle

    Obama is the only one that understood that american policies need a radical changed not just a facelift as Hilary Clinton or worse a masque to keep everything unchanged like the republican are trying to do. All the rest is just media

  • 05/10/2008 21:56:21 Alert a moderator

    Gov. Palin's victory

    Governor Palin took charge during this debate. She dominated the foreign policy arguments where Sen. Biden was forgetful of the names of a few people and not confident with his own answers. They both brought in their respective experience and gave good answers so the people know where they stand.

    Governor Palin demonstrates that she is going to "shake things up" in Washington whereas Sen. Biden will only continue to do what the Democrats tell him. He does not show individual conviction on the issues.

  • 05/10/2008 21:47:06 Alert a moderator

    send in the clowns

    as everyone speaks of mccain,obama,it is a side show neither is any different..and america is dying...no jobs..a foolish economy based on credit which allows people to live beyond their means...our lawmakers have decided to let this country suffer a slow and agonizing death while filling up their pockets and if you want to support your rapist vote rep or dem and sit back and hope ..they got you good...their is no such thing as freedom or democracy just words to comfort the sheeple..what a bunch of sad losers..

  • 05/10/2008 20:02:21 Alert a moderator

    Biden-Palin Debate

    Unable to watch this debate, I listened on the radio. What struck me was the repitition of incomplete logic, disjointed syntax and odd cliches from Ms. Palin. She repeatedly avoided the inquiries of the moderator and answered to questions that she must have been asking only herself. 45 minutes into this debate, my impression was that such expressions of imbecility are apparently fashionable and quite acceptable in her faction of politics. At the conclusion, I was astonished by the punditry giving her a passing grade and then realized that, having not seen Ms. Palin perform, I was confined to her words and not her image. Mr. Biden, in contrast, was a gracious and intelligently prepared participant. What impressed me was his reference to Mike Mansfield towards the end of this debate. How true. All participants are desiring of "improvement" of the political climate and the United States. However, the goals and the methods of approach give the difference. Ms. Palin does not want to look at the current state of affairs or of the last eight years as it would provide the seal of damnation to her static political ideology and that of her running mate. In contrast, Mr. Biden understands the imperative of dynamic politics and the willingness to make his views and policy based upon evidence.

  • 05/10/2008 11:15:45 Alert a moderator

    "Debate"

    Palin acts like a very tacky salesperson in a tiny McCain's store. She insists that we all must buy their useless items instead of what we really need. If we believe her.. we will bring that rotten "NUCU-LAR" stuff to our "kitchen table" very soon. That stuff is neither fresh nor new as you think, and Palin herself is brainlessly inappropriate in our stressful time.
    Ignorant Americans who like Palin, shall LEARN ABOUT THE WORLD and America IN IT !!
    or they can stay stupid and move to Palin's Wasilla. Please take one-track minded brave McCain with you. They will rule you, and "defend" you in Alaska. They are too dangerously ignorant to rule the country.

  • 05/10/2008 11:13:16 Alert a moderator

    Palin

    Well it is always the policy of idiots ,thier ignorance has to descend into the gutter.they always pander to ignorance ,the trade mark of american politics.there is a saying "You can fool the people some of the time ,but not all of the time"

  • 05/10/2008 08:50:36 Alert a moderator

    The debate between Biden and Pelin

    Overall the debate was pretty straight forward, in my opinion I believe the Senator Biden did a better job at answering the questions that were posed. It seemed to me as if Gov Palin was attempting to evade most of the question and deflect her answers as to place this focus on what she did as a Mayor of small Alaska town, and in no way does that qualify her to be the Vice President of the United States Of America in my eyes.

  • 05/10/2008 06:36:23 Alert a moderator

    Joe has to be the winner

    She was a good candidate until she started talking. She's against women's rights,environment issues and supports the war in Iraq

  • 05/10/2008 03:00:57 Alert a moderator

    Debate

    I came to this debate wanting substance. When personalities and style are taken away from this matchup, I will give a narrow win to Biden. He, at least, contributed substance beyond talking points. Both appeared prepped ... and Gwen Ifill was careful to be non-partisan.

  • 04/10/2008 21:37:56 Alert a moderator

    Winner of VP debate

    Sarah Palin won.

  • 04/10/2008 17:49:08 Alert a moderator

    I've heard this song before

    I was not impressed with Mrs. Palin. By stating that she would not answer the moderator's questions at the outset showed a total disrespect for the electoral process, the moderator, her opponent, and the American people. She sounded over-rehearsed like she was afraid to deviate from what she had been told to say in light of her recent media blunders. It's easy to sound good when you're not really saying anything at all. I continue to not be impressed with Mrs. Palin as a candidate. I found out more about her opponents than what she and her primary believe to be the best course for our country. To date, everything I have heard her say has been nothing less than what I would expect from any other politician out of their depth. So much for being a maverick.

    Mr. Biden was a very persuasive speaker. He was respectful to the moderator and the viewers, and gracious to the blatant snubs and gaffs of his opponent. I felt I learned something about him and his positions. It was good to see a politician conduct himself with grace and honor. That was truly a refreshing change in this election.

    While both sides gave several incomplete reports of voting records and other statistics, I feel that Mr. Biden did less of this. Having been in the Senate for the votes being discussed, I feel he had a better grasp of the history and the circumstances behind those votes. Mrs. Palin showed her ignorance of the Federal legislative process many times.

    After viewing this debate, I believe that Mr. Biden won hands down. While Mrs. Palin met expectations, the bar had been set so low that she could not help but meet or exceed them by simply appearing for the event. She very much reminds me of our current president in the debates eight years ago, also the governor of a geographically large state with a folksy accent and demeanor. If that is what the American people want more of, then please show me where to apply for asylum elsewhere where more moderate heads prevail.

  • 04/10/2008 17:11:36 Alert a moderator

    Palin v Biden

    So totally impressed - National news media has made her a heroine by all their bashing. She is like 99% of Americans not BS people from Washington and New York

  • 04/10/2008 14:16:07 Alert a moderator

    Palin-Biden

    Forgot to add. Palin did a wonderful job. What I liked is she is not an insider of Washington - Fresh and and a lift to my spirits.

  • 04/10/2008 14:13:05 Alert a moderator

    palin-biden

    McCain is our strong leader and the economy is not his fault or the republicans. Look at histroy - Carter went down because of the econmy =Regan brought it back. Obama will tx Americans down the line.

  • 04/10/2008 14:01:54 Alert a moderator

    Palin

    Mrs Palin plainly won. As for the only televised vice presidential debate, well I believe that this is the 7th one.

  • 04/10/2008 06:12:45 Alert a moderator

    The VP Debate

    Palin came across "well" rehearsed, but superficial and entirely too folksy for the high office she seeks. She lacks both substance and polish, though she rebounded somewhat from her blunders in the two public appearances with the media. Truly - she's not ready to lead this powerful nation, because she's demonstrated that she's profoundly inadequate for the World Stage. She's an embarrassment to this country and she’s clearly out of her league. She and McCain make a great team and that's where it ends. Can you imagine her and 5 babies running around in the White House?? Please! Finishing School might help her, but nothing short of a miracle would bring her to a level of competence to become President of the USA, because she simply doesn't have it. Beer drinking, rifle slinging and dressing a moose don’t appear to be the height of elegance nor the level of class and refinement that good etiquette brings when one is in such a prestigious position. Haven't we been embarrassed enough over the past 8 years with an apparent absence of intellectual prowess? Remember the definition of insanity and we won’t make the same mistake twice. clp

  • 04/10/2008 05:21:24 Alert a moderator

    VP debate

    No doubt the difference in quality of mind although Mrs. Sarah Palin did a great deal better than anticipated, but still came short of Mr. Biden

  • 04/10/2008 04:01:45 Alert a moderator

    Bidden/Palin Debate

    Senator Bidden was the professional, organized speaker who could answer "on his feet" vs. read from a script or from memorized phrases. Mrs. Palin's folksy act was ridiculous and contrived. To think that this poor amateur is being foisted on the public as a representative of our best leadership, is stupid on the part of the US Republican party. Senator Bidden has earned the respect of the public and deserves to be on a winning ticket with a true American idol - Senator Obama.

  • 04/10/2008 03:19:53 Alert a moderator

    US V-P candidates

    Bidden was far superior

  • 04/10/2008 02:31:17 Alert a moderator

    Biden/Palin Debate

    I believe that Joe Biden actually won the debate, but Sara Palin held her own somewhat. She was very good at avoiding some of the questions and only answering those she either could or wanted to. I was very tired of hearing what mavericks she and McCain are. Her English usage was talking down to the public, trying to be a good ol gal, and missed the mark.

  • 03/10/2008 00:46:40 Alert a moderator

    Debate Winner

    Joe Biden by a landslide, Palin couldn't even answer the questions asked of her, she kept changing the subjects.

  • 1 2  3  4  5   » 

    Vidéo

    • CANDIDATES GET NASTY

      The slings and arrows step up. Report by Oliver Farry. 07/10/08.

    • US retirees vulberable in crisis

      Story: CBS news, N. Rushworth

    • WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY STUDENTS REACT TO DEBATE

      Guillaume Meyer gathered reactions from students at the university where the debate was held, in St. Louis, MO. 03/10/08

    • Rudy Giuliani

      "Palin had a magnificent victory," the former New York mayor told FRANCE 24, 03/10

    • David Axelrod

      'I think Sen. Biden ultimately won this debate,' Barack Obama's advisor's told FRANCE 24, 03/10


 

 

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