Democrat Senator Barack Obama and Republican rival Senator John McCain were set to take their White House duel deep into the US heartland yesterday in a final push for votes ahead of next week’s election.
With just four days left before Tuesday’s presidential ballot, front-runner Obama was to hold campaign rallies in the midwestern states of Iowa and Indiana while McCain was wrapping up a two-day bus tour of Ohio.
On Thursday, the two candidates traded body-blows after grim new figures showed the world’s largest economy was staring at recession.
PHOTO: AP
The US government said the economy had shrunk by 0.3 percent in the third quarter through last month, its worst contraction since 2001.
McCain’s campaign insisted the bleak economic outlook would be made even worse by an Obama administration, saying his opponent would raise taxes on small businesses, stifling growth and killing jobs.
“Today’s announcement ... confirms what Americans already knew: The economy is shrinking,” McCain adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin said in a statement. “Barack Obama would accelerate this dangerous course.”
But Obama, 47, pounced on the news to say his rival would pursue what he called failed Republican policies promulgated by US President George W. Bush.
“If you want to know where John McCain will drive this economy, just look in the rear-view mirror. Because when it comes to our economic policies, John McCain has been right next to George Bush,” Obama said.
“He’s been sitting there in the passenger seat, ready to take over, every step of the way,” he told a crowd of more than 60,000 supporters on a day-long blitz though the battleground states of Florida, Virginia and Missouri. “It is time to change drivers. It is time to have somebody else at the wheel.”
In an interview with NBC News, Obama said the job facing the president-elect taking office on Jan. 20 had gotten much harder as a result of the financial crisis.
“It’s going to be a lot tougher. I don’t think there’s any doubt about that. We know that the next president is likely to inherit a significant recession,” Obama said, while sticking to his list of big-spending priorities.
McCain, 72, has struggled to compete with Obama on economic policy as polls show the issue remains the overwhelming concern for voters.
The latest national poll by the New York Times and CBS News gave Obama a yawning lead of 11 points among likely voters — 52 percent, compared with 41 percent for McCain.
On Thursday, McCain wheeled out Ohio tradesman Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, better known as “Joe the Plumber,” to buttress his case in a state that he must win if he is to take the White House.
No US president has been elected without winning Ohio since 1960, and Obama is ahead in state polls.
McCain was to call on former movie star turned California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to campaign alongside him in Ohio yesterday before heading to Pennsylvania.
Obama was enlisting former vice president Al Gore to campaign for him in Florida, where the anti-global warming crusader suffered his agonizing loss in the 2000 election to Bush.
After his Iowa event, the Democrat was to break for a Halloween visit to his two young daughters in Chicago before heading to an evening rally in Highland, Indiana, just over the Illinois border.
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