/ 13 September 2008

Obama skewers McCain as White House truce scrapped

Barack Obama ripped into 72-year-old John McCain as an out-of-touch economic illiterate who had slept through the internet revolution as war resumed on the White House trail on Friday.

The Democrat vowed to wield the ”truth” against his Republican adversary’s ”lies” and seize the policy high ground, but McCain denied resorting to outright untruths in his escalating attacks on Obama.

Questioned by a man frustrated with Obama’s response to a Republican ”smear campaign”, the Illinois senator said in Dover, New Hampshire, that Democrats were right to be nervous because ”they’ve seen this movie before”.

”I just have a different philosophy, and that is I am going to respond with the truth,” he said, expressing confidence that US voters would not be diverted from anxieties over the economy, healthcare, education and war.

”I can guarantee that we are going to be hitting back hard … but we’re hitting back on the issues that matter to families. I’m not going to start making up lies about John McCain,” Obama said.

Later in Concord, the Democrat said the choice facing Americans in the November 4 election was stark as he mocked McCain’s ”maverick” credentials by noting his lock-step voting record with President George Bush.

”The choice could not be clearer. And it’s because the choice is so clear that you’ve seen the other side not want to spend any time talking about the issues,” he said.

”They’ve been talking about lipstick, they’ve been talking about pigs, they’ve been talking about Paris [Hilton], they’ve been talking about Britney [Spears].

”They will spend any amount of money and use any tactic out there in order to avoid talking about how we are going to move America into the future.”

In an advertising counter-offensive launched a day after the campaigns called a truce for the seventh anniversary of the September 11 attacks, Obama’s camp portrayed McCain as a ”gutter” politician, not a principled maverick.

‘His star is fading’
The sharper rhetoric came after McCain eliminated Obama’s lead in the polls following his shock pick two weeks ago of Sarah Palin as his running mate.

The McCain campaign, meanwhile, aired a new ad accusing their rivals of disrespecting Palin, who appeared to stumble over key foreign policy questions in her first major network interview with ABC News on Thursday.

”He was the world’s biggest celebrity, but his star’s fading,” the McCain ad said, accusing Obama and supporters of belittling Palin.

The independent website FactCheck.org said the McCain ad explored ”new paths of deception” after other contentious claims that Obama had called Palin a ”pig” and advocated teaching sex education to kindergarten children.

”Actually, they are not lies,” McCain, who had no campaign events on Friday, said on ABC programme The View.

The Democratic campaign had argued that McCain’s camp deliberately twisted Obama’s recent comment that Republican claims to represent change were like putting ”lipstick on a pig” as a sexist slur on Palin.

”He shouldn’t have said it. He chooses his words very carefully, this is a tough campaign,” McCain said.

Meanwhile, in another part of her ABC interview broadcast on Friday, Palin picked at the scars of the Democratic primary fight, saying Obama must now be ”regretting” that he did not name Hillary Clinton as his running mate.

But the Obama campaign pounced on video footage of Palin in March, when she said Clinton’s ”perceived whine” during the primary campaign ”doesn’t do us any good — women in politics, women in general wanting to progress this country”.

”Sarah Palin should spare us the phoney sentiment and respect,” Florida Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who vocally backed Clinton during the primaries, said in an Obama campaign statement.

Obama (47) parried with two ads, one of which branded McCain as a Bush clone.

”1982, John McCain goes to Washington. Things have changed in the last 26 years, but McCain hasn’t,” the narrator said.

”He admits he still doesn’t know how to use a computer, can’t send an email. Still doesn’t understand the economy, and favours $200-billion in tax cuts for corporations, but almost nothing for the middle class.

”After one president who was out of touch, we just can’t afford more of the same.”

McCain, who would be the oldest president inaugurated to a first term, told the New York Times in July: ”I am learning to get online myself, and I will have that down fairly soon, getting on myself.” — AFP

 

AFP