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Monday, October 27, 2008
Joe the Plumber a hit in Kettering
Vendors at the John McCain event in Kettering Monday, Oct. 27, were selling this pin:
The campaign is also touting a series of “Joe the Plumber” events around the state to be held Tuesday, including one at 12:30 p.m. at the Dublin Pub in Dayton. The events will supposedly include a “special guest.”
Hmmmm……
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TweetT-shirts for Palin
Here are a few shots courtesy of Dayton Daily News reporter Kelli Wynn from today’s event in Kettering….
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TweetOne week to go: Who do you think will be the next president?
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Tweet1.4 million Ohioans want absentee ballots
More than 1.45 million Ohio voters have asked for in-person or mail-in absentee ballots as of Friday, Oct. 24, according to Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner.
This is the first presidential election in Ohio with no fault absentee voting where no reason needs to be given to get an absentee ballot.
Brunner predicts a record 80 percent voter turnout, or 6.48 million voters. Brunner anticipates 2.16 million votes will be cast by absentee ballot.
Roughly, 12,800 Ohioans registered to vote and voted on the same day during a five-day window in which same-day registration and voting was allowed.
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TweetMcCain in Kettering says he’ll fight till the end
John McCain used the last week of the 2008 presidential campaign to try to position himself as the best candidate for a troubled economy and to let a Kettering crowd know that even though he lags in the polls, he isn’t giving up.
Speaking at the James S. Trent Arena behind Fairmont High School in Kettering, the Republican nominee for president told an enthusiastic crowd that “nothing is inevitable here” and that his campaign is ready to “fight to the end.”
“Let me give you the state of the race today,” he said. “There’s eight days to go. We’re a few points down. The pundits have written us off, just like they’ve done before four or five times.”
But he told the crowd he would fight until the election’s end. “I’ve never been the kind to back down when the stakes are high,” he said.
He was greeted by a crowd of GOP faithful, some who stood in line as early as 8 a.m. in chilly weather to see McCain speak at the 2 p.m. event. They waited for him in the arena for Fairmont High School with pep-rally exuberance, one-half of the arena chanting “McCain,” while the other responded “Palin.”
“Use your brain, vote McCain,” they chanted while waiting.
McCain also used the rally as a chance to criticize Democrat Barack Obama’s economic plans and pit himself as the right candidate to fix the economy. Obama has held an advantage on the economic issue in recent national and state polls.
“He believes in redistributing wealth, not in policies that grow our economy and create jobs,” McCain said. “He is more interested in controlling wealth than in creating it, in redistributing money instead of spreading opportunity. I am going to create wealth for all Americans, by creating opportunity for all Americans.”
McCain said Obama has voted “94 times” for tax increases or against tax cuts, and made a charge that has become familiar in this campaign: That Obama, if elected, would raise taxes. Obama has said he would only raise taxes for those who earn $250,000 or more a year, and that he would cut taxes for those who earn less.
But McCain said Obama’s “massive new tax increase” would be the “wrong approach” in an economic slowdown.
“The answer to a slowing economy is not higher taxes, but that is exactly what is going to happen when the Democrats have total control of Washington,” he said. “We can’t let that happen. We need pro-growth and pro-jobs economic policies, not pro-government spending programs paid for with higher taxes.”
He also sought to separate himself from President Bush, repeating a refrain he made during a stop in Cleveland this morning.
“We cannot spend the next four years as we have spent much of the last eight: spending ourselves into a ditch and hoping that the consequences don’t come,” he said. “We need to get our government under control, and we need to get our economy moving again. We have to act. We need a new direction, and we have to fight for it.”
He said if he were elected, he would double the child deduction for working families, cut the capital gains taxes and cut business taxes.” And he said he would cut spending.
“I’m going to make the government live on a budget just like you do,” he said.
With one week to go in the presidential race, Obama holds a slight advantage in Ohio, a key state with 20 electoral votes. No Republican has ever won the White House without carrying the state of Ohio.
Monday marked McCain’s 10th visit to southwest Ohio since January 2007. That tally includes trips to Dayton, Cincinnati and West Chester. In all, he has made an estimated 39 appearances in Ohio since January 2007, according to the Washington Post’s candidate tracker. Obama, meanwhile, has visited the Buckeye State 44 times since January 2007, and has visited southwest Ohio, considered a Republican stronghold, eight times.
Watching McCain in Kettering on Monday, Quentin Durrstein, 38 of Beavercreek, said he appreciated McCain’s feistiness.
“He’s showing a lot more energy again,” he said. “He’s showing his willingness to fight again.”
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TweetThe “jury” in Canton likes Obama’s “closing argument”
CANTON -His handlers billed Democrat Barack Obama’s speech as the “closing argument” in the presidential campaign but most of the “jury” gathered in the Canton Memorial Civic Center had their minds made up before Obama took the stage.
“I’m ready for a change ..like yesterday,” Michele Currence, 54, of Canton said on Monday, Oct. 27.
Obama used his speech to offer a “a politics that calls on our better angels instead of encouraging our worst instincts; one that reminds us of obligations we have to ourselves and one another.”
The plea to come together appealed to Mark Pitocco, 56, of nearby Louisville. “Anything that talks about unity and bringing people together is a good thing,” said Pitocco, a retiree.
But Obama mixed his above-the-political-fray rhetoric with blasts at Republican John McCain, striking back at McCain charges that Obama’s economic policies amount to “socialism.”
After ticking off his economic proposals, Obama said “I call it opportunity.” Ricky Dunham, 22, a student at Kent State University, liked the rejoinder. “Finally, it’s nice to see him fighting back a little,” said Dunham.
Obama also continued to link McCain to the unpopular occupant of the White House, President Bush.
“ .after 21 months and three debates, Sen. McCain still has not been able to tell the American people a single major thing he’d do differently from George Bush when it comes to the economy,” Obama told the crowd estimated at 4,900.
Although Obama now leads in the polls nationally and appears to have the momentum in Ohio, he warned against letting up.
“Don’t believe for a second this election is over We have a lot of work to do In one week’s time we can choose an economy that rewards work and creates jobs,” he said.
Still, some in the audience like Fred Campbell, 46, of Canton, were looking ahead. Campbell voted for Republican Ronald Reagan and said that until Obama no candidate since then has shown the ability to inspire hope.
“That’s what we need in the White House, somebody that the country can believe it,” said Campbell.
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TweetMcCain’s remarks as prepared
“It’s great to be back in Ohio. We need to win Ohio on November 4th, and with your help we’re going to win here, and bring real change to Washington, DC.
It’s been a long campaign and we’ve heard a lot of words, and great campaign trail eloquence. The amazing thing is that we’ve learned more about Senator Obama’s real goals for our country over the last two weeks than we learned over the past two years. It is amazing that even at this late hour, we are still learning more about Senator Obama and his agenda. He told Joe the plumber right here in Ohio he wants to quote “spread the wealth around.” It’s always more interesting to hear what people have to say in these unscripted moments, and today we heard another moment like this from Senator Obama.
In a radio interview revealed today, he said that one of the quote — “tragedies” of the civil rights movement is that it didn’t bring about a redistribution of wealth in our society. He said, and I quote, “One of the tragedies of the Civil Rights movement was because the Civil Rights movement became so court-focused I think that there was a tendency to lose track of the political and community organizing and activities on the ground that are able to put together the actual coalitions of power through which you bring about redistributive change.”
That is what change means for Barack the Redistributor: It means taking your money and giving it to someone else. He believes in redistributing wealth, not in policies that grow our economy and create jobs. He is more interested in controlling wealth than in creating it, in redistributing money instead of spreading opportunity. I am going to create wealth for all Americans, by creating opportunity for all Americans.
We’ve all heard his campaign trail promise: he says he only wants to tax the rich. But these unscripted moments and his record tell a different story. He supported the Democratic budget plan passed just this year that called for raising taxes on people making just 42,000 dollars per year. And Senator Obama has voted 94 times for tax increases or against tax cuts.
Senator Obama may say he’s trying to soak the rich, but it’s the middle class who are going to get put through the wringer, because even the tax increase he admits to misses the target. To pay for nearly a trillion dollars in new government spending, his tax increase would impact 50 percent of small business income in this country, and the jobs of 16 million middle class Americans who work for those small businesses.
Whether it’s Joe the Plumber here in Ohio or the working men and women across this country, we shouldn’t be taxing our small businesses more as Senator Obama wants to do, we need to be helping them expand their businesses and create jobs. America didn’t become the greatest nation on earth by giving our money to the government to “redistribute.” In this country, we believe in spreading opportunity, for those who need jobs and those who create them. And that is exactly what I intend to do as President of the United States.
My opponent’s massive new tax increase is exactly the wrong approach in an economic slowdown. The answer to a slowing economy is not higher taxes, but that is exactly what is going to happen when the Democrats have total control of Washington. We can’t let that happen. We need pro-growth and pro-jobs economic policies, not pro-government spending programs paid for with higher taxes.
This is the fundamental difference between Senator Obama and me. We both disagree with President Bush on economic policy. The difference is that he thinks taxes have been too low, and I think that spending has been too high. Senator Obama’s priority is not to get spending under control, it is to spend more, and if he has to tax you to do it, he’s shown in the past that he doesn’t have a problem with that.
We cannot spend the next four years as we have spent much of the last eight: spending ourselves into a ditch and hoping that the consequences don’t come. We need to get our government under control, and we need to get our economy moving again. We have to act. We need a new direction, and we have to fight for it.
I’ve been fighting for this country since I was seventeen years old, and I have the scars to prove it. If I’m elected President, I will fight to shake up Washington and take America in a new direction from my first day in office until my last. I’m not afraid of the fight, I’m ready for it.
I’m not going to spend $750 billion dollars of your money just bailing out the Wall Street bankers and brokers who got us into this mess. I’m going to make sure we take care of the working people who were devastated by the excesses of Wall Street and Washington.
I have a plan to hold the line on taxes and cut them to make America more competitive and create jobs here at home. We’re going to double the child deduction for working families. We will cut the capital gains tax. And we will cut business taxes to help create jobs, and keep American businesses in America. Raising taxes makes a bad economy much worse. Keeping taxes low creates jobs, keeps money in your hands and strengthens our economy.
If I’m elected President, I won’t spend nearly a trillion dollars more of your money. Senator Obama will. And he can’t do that without raising your taxes or digging us further into debt. I’m going to make government live on a budget just like you do.
I will freeze government spending on all but the most important programs like defense, veterans care, Social Security and health care until we scrub every single government program and get rid of the ones that aren’t working for the American people. And I will veto every single pork barrel bill Congresses passes.
If I’m elected President, we’re going to stop spending $700 billion to buy oil from countries that don’t like us very much. Senator Obama will argue to delay drilling for more oil and gas and against building new nuclear power plants in America. If I am president, we will start new drilling now. We will invest in all energy alternatives — nuclear, wind, solar, and tide. We will encourage the manufacture of hybrid, flex fuel and electric automobiles. We will invest in clean coal technology. We will lower the cost of energy within months, and we will create millions of new jobs.
Let me give you the state of the race today. There’s eight days to go. We’re a few points down. The pundits have written us off, just like they’ve done before. My opponent is working out the details with Speaker Pelosi and Senator Reid of their plans to raise your taxes, increase spending, and concede defeat in Iraq. He’s measuring the drapes, and he’s planned his first address to the nation for before the election. I guess I’m old fashioned about these things I prefer to let the voters weigh in before presuming the outcome.
What America needs now is someone who will finish the race before the starting the victory lap … someone who will fight to the end, and not for himself but for his country.
I have fought for you most of my life, and in places where defeat meant more than returning to the Senate. There are other ways to love this country, but I’ve never been the kind to back down when the stakes are high.
I know you’re worried. America is a great country, but we are at a moment of national crisis that will determine our future.
Will we continue to lead the world’s economies or will we be overtaken? Will the world become safer or more dangerous? Will our military remain the strongest in the world? Will our children and grandchildren’s future be brighter than ours?
My answer to you is yes. Yes, we will lead. Yes, we will prosper. Yes, we will be safer. Yes, we will pass on to our children a stronger, better country. But we must be prepared to act swiftly, boldly, with courage and wisdom.
I’m an American. And I choose to fight. Don’t give up hope. Be strong. Have courage. And fight.
Fight for a new direction for our country. Fight for what’s right for America.
Fight to clean up the mess of corruption, infighting and selfishness in Washington.
Fight to get our economy out of the ditch and back in the lead.
Fight for the ideals and character of a free people.
Fight for our children’s future.
Fight for justice and opportunity for all.
Stand up to defend our country from its enemies.
Stand up, stand up, stand up and fight. America is worth fighting for. Nothing is inevitable here. We never give up. We never quit. We never hide from history. We make history.
Now, let’s go win this election and get this country moving again.”
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TweetMcCain vows he’ll fight, says he is the right candidate for the economy
John McCain used the last week of the 2008 presidential campaign to try to position himself as the better candidate for the economy and to let a Kettering crowd know that even though he lags in the polls, he isn’t giving up.
Speaking at the James S. Trent Arena behind Fairmont High School in Kettering, McCain, the Republican nominee for president, told an enthusiastic crowd that “nothing is inevitable here” and that his campaign is ready to “fight to the end.”
“Let me give you the state of the race today,” he said. “There’s eight days to go. We’re a few points down. The pundits have written us off, just like they’ve done before four or five times.”
But he told the crowd he would fight until the election’s end. “I’ve never been the kind to back down when the stakes are high,” he said.
McCain also used the rally as a chance to criticize Democrat Barack Obama’s economic plans and pit himself as the right candidate to fix the economy.
“He believes in redistributing wealth, not in policies that grow our economy and create jobs,” McCain said. “He is more interested in controlling wealth than in creating it, in redistributing money instead of spreading opportunity. I am going to create wealth for all Americans, by creating opportunity for all Americans.”
McCain said Obama has voted “94 times” for tax increases or against tax cuts, and made a charge that has become familiar in this campaign: That Obama, if elected, would raise taxes. Obama has said he would only raise taxes for those who earn $250,000 or more a year, and that he would cut taxes for those who earn less.
But McCain said Obama’s “massive new tax increase” would be the “wrong approach” in an economic slowdown.
“The answer to a slowing economy is not higher taxes, but that is exactly what is going to happen when the Democrats have total control of Washington,” he said. “We can’t let that happen. We need pro-growth and pro-jobs economic policies, not pro-government spending programs paid for with higher taxes.”
He also sought to separate himself from President Bush, repeating a refrain he made during a stop in Cleveland this morning.
“We cannot spend the next four years as we have spent much of the last eight: spending ourselves into a ditch and hoping that the consequences don’t come,” he said. “We need to get our government under control, and we need to get our economy moving again. We have to act. We need a new direction, and we have to fight for it.”
He said if he were elected, he would double the child deduction for working families, cut the capital gains taxes and cut business taxes.” And he said he would cut spending.
“I’m going to make the government live on a budget just like you do,” he said.
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TweetCindy’s speaking….
She’s reminding voters of the fact that between her family and the Palins, three members are serving in the armed services.
“The man standing behind me has lived his life by a code of conduct his entire life,” she said of her husband. “Duty, honor and country is how he lives his life.”
Also on stage today is former Republican vice-presidential candidate Jack Kemp, former pro-football player, and former congressman.
Kemp’s up next.
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TweetMcCain’s on stage….
U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Centerville, just introduced Cindy McCain, who, presumably, will introduce her husband….
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TweetMcCain in Ohio: He’ll be baaaaaack.
Republican presidential nominee will make the final appearance of his Road to Victory bus tour in Columbus Friday, Oct. 31, at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, the campaign announced Monday, Oct. 27.
He’ll appear with Calif. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Doors open at 3 p.m. For more information, go to www.johnmccain.com.
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TweetAaron Tippin sings; Crowd chants
Country singer Aaron Tippin just got off the stage after singing a rousing song about domestic oil drilling, “Drill here, drill now.”
Sample lyrics:
“Drill here, drill now How ‘bout some oil from our own soil that belongs to us anyhow No more debatin’ we’re tired of waitin’ everybody shout out loud Drill here, drill now”
“Every time a foreign tanker pulls up to our shore They got us over a barrel while they bleed us a little more And think how much it costs just to bring it all that way And how many American jobs that’d make if we were drillin’ in the USA Oh and God forbid if our oily friends should decide to cut us off We’d be standin’ around with our britches down now listen to me ya’ll.”
The crowd’s also been full of pep-rally cheer, as evidenced by the chanting, and the fact that the arena is behind Fairmont High School in Kettering. One side of the arena is shouting, “McCain.” The other is shouting, “Palin.”
Another chant: “Use your brain, vote McCain.”
Now they’re doing the wave!
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TweetTotal “Joe the Plumber” references so far:
Three.
Total speakers so far: five.
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TweetTurner warms up GOP faithful at Kettering event
It’s U.S. Rep. Mike Turner’s turn to rev up the GOP faithful.
“Since we’re in school, I thought we’d have a little test,” Turner, R-Centerville said, to a few light-hearted groans. “I’m going to make it easy because, as you can imagine, the answer’s John McCain.”
“Who’s going to make us strong?” he asked.
The crowd, hoisting McCain-Palin signs, yelled, “John McCain!”
“Who’s going to make us safe?” he asked.
“John McCain!” they yelled.
He asked a few questions in a similar vein, and wrapped up with, “Who’s going to win Ohio in November?”
“John McCain!” they yelled.
“Who’s the next president of the United States?” he asked.
“John McCain!”
“Very good,” he said. “You all pass.”
State. Rep. Jon Husted, R-Kettering, is up next.
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TweetJoe the Plumber, meet Joe the Painter
Sen. John McCain isn’t scheduled to speak until 2:30 p.m., but the crowds at the James S. Trent Arena are already exuberant.
The Fairmont High School Marching band got the crowd revved up, but Joe Ellis, a Republican candidate for Montgomery County Commissioner, cracked the crowd up.
Ellis, a painting contractor, told the crowd that “Lately, my friends have been calling me “Joe the Painter” - a not-so-veiled reference to “Joe the Plumber,” the Toledo man who McCain has held up as a symbol of the working class.
“Next week, I hope they call me Joe the Montgomery County Commissioner,” Ellis said.
He was followed by Republican attorney general candidate Mike Crites. Former U.S. Rep. Rob Portman, R-Terrace Park, is addressing the crowds now.
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TweetIssue 5: $14.17 per signature to get on the ballot
COLUMBUS - The payday lending industry paid $3.42 million to collect the required 241,365 signatures to get Issue 5 on the Nov. 4 ballot.
That works out to $14.17 per valid signature.
Campaign finance reports filed last week show Issue 5 is supported by payday lending companies and an industry trade group. Since July, they’ve spent $14.6 million to get on the ballot and then urge a No vote on Issue 5.
Here is a sampling of where the money is going:
$175,000 to Fleishman Hilliard Inc., a public relations firm
$934,438 to Strategic Public Partners Group, a political consulting firm with ties to the Ohio GOP
$449,063 to three law firms for legal fees
$6.9 million to Midwest Communications & Media, a firm owned by Columbus lobbyist Neil Clark that buys TV advertising time
$50,000 to State Street Consultants, a political consulting firm owned by Neil Clark
$1.6 million for mailings
$71,700 for automated calls
$212,847 for polling
The No on Issue 5 campaign seeks to block parts of a new payday lending law adopted by the General Assembly earlier this year that caps annual interest rates on short term loans at 28 percent, down from the current 391 percent.
The No on Issue 5 campaign warns that if the rate cap stands, most of the state’s 1,400 payday lending stores will close and 6,000 workers will lose their jobs. They argue that adults should have the financial freedom to take out payday loans without government interference.
The Yes on Issue 5 campaign, in contrast, spent $261,765 since Sept. 15, with $260,438 of that coming from the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio. COHHIO is a non-profit organization that advocates to end homelessness and promote affordable housing.
The Yes on Issue 5 campaign hopes to win by working with groups that have endorsed their side, including AARP Ohio, Ohio Farm Bureau, Ohio Council of Churches, and Ohio Manufacturers Association which are urging their members to vote Yes.
“We have people at every level. We’re getting our word out through very basic means from people who care about the issue,” said Yes on Issue 5 spokeswoman Sandy Theis.
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TweetMcCain heading toward southwest Ohio
Sen. John McCain is headed to southwest Ohio.
McCain, the Republican nominee for president, is slated to appear at a rally in Kettering at 2:30 p.m. today, Monday Oct. 27, following a meeting with economic business leaders in Cleveland.
In Cleveland, he sought to separate himself from President Bush on economic issues and criticized rival Barack Obama for his economic plan.
“We both disagree with President Bush on economic policies,” McCain said after that meeting. “The difference is that he thinks taxes have been too low and I think that spending has been too high.”
Monday’s visit marked McCain’s 10th visit to southwest Ohio since January 2007. That tally includes trips to Dayton, Cincinnati and West Chester. In all, he has visited Ohio 37 times since July 2007, according to the Washington Post’s candidate tracker.
And more are expected to be added by the end of the week: The campaign is reportedly planning a two-day bus tour through Ohio at the end of the week that will conclude Friday in Columbus that Calif. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger plans to attend. His vice-presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, is slated to attend a rally in Bowling Green on Wednesday.
Obama, meanwhile, has visited the Buckeye State 44 times since January 2007. Many of his visits have been focused on the more Democratic-leaning northeast corner of the state, as well as southeast Ohio, which has been in play and helped give Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland his seat in 2006. Still, he’s visited southwest Ohio, considered a Republican stronghold, eight times during that period.
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TweetObama gets a hand from Bill Cosby
Comedian Bill Cosby is pushing more than Jello Pudding Pops these days. The Obama campaign announced Monday, Oct. 27, that Cosby will be in Detroit, Mich., Tuesday, Oct. 28, on behalf of Obama’s campaign.
In Michigan, the campaign announced, Cosby will talk about Michigan’s role in the election and urge members of the community to get more involved.
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TweetObama offers a politics that “calls on our better angels”
CANTON - Democrat presidential candidate Barack Obama today, Oct. 27, was prepared to call on voters here and across the country to join with him in a “new politics.”
In prepared excerpts from his closing argument speech to be delivered about 12:30 p.m. at the Canton Memorial Civic Center, Obama said it would be a “a politics that call on our better angels instead of encouraging our worst instincts; one that reminds us of obligations we have to ourselves and one another. “
It will be Obama’s 44th Ohio campaign appearance since Jan. 1, 2007 according to the Washington Post “Election Tracker.”
Obama’s high-toned plea, however, was accompanied by blasts at Republican John McCain, linking McCain and his economic policies to the unpopular President Bush. McCain started the day in Cleveland and is expected at a rally in Kettering later.
“And now, after 21 months and three debates, Sen. McCain still has not been able to tell the American people a single major thing he’d do differently from George Bush when it comes to the economy,” said Obama.
“Sen. McCain says that we can’t spend the next four years waiting for our luck to change, but you understand that the biggest gamble we can take is embracing the same old Bush-McCain policies that have failed us for the last eight years.”
Obama said he has the economic proposals to help the middle class and get the economy moving again, refuting McCain charges that he would raise taxes and hurt the economy.
“So the choice in this election isn’t between tax cuts and no tax cuts.
“It’s about whether you believe we should only reward wealth, or whether we should also reward the work and workers who create it.
“I will give a tax break to 95% of Americans who work every day and get taxes taken out of their paychecks every week. I’ll eliminate income taxes for seniors making under $50,000 and give homeowners and working parents more of a break.
“And I’ll help pay for this by asking the folks who are making more than $250,000 a year to go back to the tax rate they were paying in the 1990s. No matter what Senator McCain may claim, here are the facts - if you make under $250,000, you will not see your taxes increase by a single dime - not your income taxes, not your payroll taxes, not your capital gains taxes.
“Nothing. Because the last thing we should do in this economy is raise taxes on the middle-class.”
Today’s dueling rallies are the start of the sprint to the finish in the presidential election, a sprint that is expected to bring both candidates back to Ohio.
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