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CNN: With big lead, Obama says McCain is 'running out of time'Story Highlights. Barack Obama holds 9-point lead over John McCain

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛(CNN) -- With less than two weeks until Election Day, Sen. Barack Obama is telling voters that Sen. John McCain is "running out of time" and as a result has taken to "making stuff up" on Obama's record and tax cut plan.


Sen. Barack Obama has a sizeable lead over Sen. John McCain in the national polls.

Obama holds his biggest lead yet, according to CNN's latest average of national polls. He is ahead of McCain by nine points -- 51 percent to 42 percent.

Tuesday's poll of polls shows that Obama has "moved into a commanding position in the presidential race," said Alan Silverleib, CNN's senior political researcher.

"Obama is either tied or ahead in all of the battleground states," Silverleib said. "The Democrats now have what may be a decisive edge in terms of voter enthusiasm and financial resources ... While anything can happen in the remaining two weeks, it's hard not to conclude that McCain's back is against the wall." Watch more on the state of the race »

As McCain tries to regain his footing, he's been hammering away at the now highly publicized remarks Obama made to a man since dubbed "Joe the plumber."

Earlier this month, Joe Wurzelbacher unintentionally stepped onto the political scene when Obama was canvassing for support in Holland, Ohio.

Wurzelbacher asked Obama if he believed in the American Dream. He said he was about to buy a company that makes more than $250,000 a year and was concerned that Obama would tax him more because of it.

Obama explained his tax plan in depth, saying it's better to lower taxes for Americans who make less money so that they could afford to buy from his business.

"I think that when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody," Obama told Wurzelbacher.

Obama told voters Tuesday night that McCain has "decided to make up, just fabricate this notion that I've been attacking Joe the plumber."

"Now, let me tell you something even just yesterday, Joe the plumber himself said that wasn't true. I've got nothing but love for Joe the plumber. That's why I want to give him a tax cut," he said at a rally in Miami, Florida.

"Apparently Sen. McCain decided that if he can't beat our ideas, then he's just going to make up some ideas and run against those."

Obama's said McCain has been on the attack instead of talking about the issues.

"That's what you do when you're out of ideas, when you're out of touch, and you're running out of time," he said.

McCain's campaign on Wednesday launched a new ad that continues the Joe the plumber line.

The ad focuses on small business owners who express concern that their businesses would struggle under Obama's tax plan.

"Barack Obama: higher taxes, more spending, not ready," the announcer says in the 30-second spot. Fact check: Obama and small businesses

Meanwhile, with limited time left on the campaign trail, the candidates are spending their final days in the most contested states.

Obama on Wednesday is holding rallies in Richmond and Leesburg, Virginia. Virginia has not voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in more than 40 years, but polls show Obama leading there.

Sen. Joe Biden, Obama's running mate, is continuing his two-day swing through Colorado, with stops scheduled in Colorado Springs and Pueblo.

On the Republican side, Sen. John McCain started his day meeting with voters in Manchester, New Hampshire.

He'll then join Gov. Sarah Palin for rallies in Green and Cincinnati, Ohio. No Republican candidate has ever won the White House without also winning Ohio.


According to CNN's average of Ohio polls, Obama leads by 3 percentage points there.

CNN's national poll of polls is composed of the following six national general election surveys of likely voters: Pew (October 16-19), CNN/ORC (October 17-19), ABC/Washington Post (October 16-19), Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby (October 18-20), Gallup (October 18-20) and Diageo/Hotline (October 18-20). It does not have a sampling error.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Report

Replies, comments and Discussions:

  • 枫下茶话 / 政治经济 / 70个国家的调查表明75%支持Obama, 67% in Canada.
    • Poll finds worldwide support for Obama
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

      October 21, 2008 at 11:35 PM EDT

      Americans may still be undecided, but the rest of the world has made up its mind about who should be elected president of the United States.

      A Gallup poll of 70 countries conducted from May through September has found widespread international support for Democratic candidate Barack Obama.

      Around the world, respondents favoured Mr. Obama 4 to 1 over Republican John McCain.

      In Canada, 67 per cent chose Mr. Obama and 22 per cent Mr. McCain. And 75 per cent of Canadian respondents said the presidential election would make a difference for their own country.


      Enlarge Image
      Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama shakes hands with supporters at a rally in Miami on Tuesday. (Jae C. Hong/Associated Press)

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      The Democratic nominee also enjoyed levels of support higher than 60 per cent in Australia, Germany, England and Japan, where the U.S. election was viewed as having a global impact.

      Around the world, only Georgia, Cambodia, Laos and the Philippines backed the Republican candidate.

      Europeans were the most likely to state a preference in the election and to believe the winner would have an impact on their own countries.

      Mr. Obama also received an overseas endorsement Tuesday from the Conservative mayor of London, Boris Johnson.

      “He visibly incarnates change and hope, at a time when America desperately needs both,” Mr. Johnson wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

      Within the United States, change seemed to be the theme of this week's polls.

      A Pew Research Center poll released Tuesday found that the Democrat is enjoying his widest margin yet over Mr. McCain among registered voters, at 52 per cent to 38 per cent.

      The Rasmussen Report, however, released a daily tracking poll that had Mr. Obama ahead by just four points, leading Mr. McCain 50 per cent to 46 per cent, and Gallup had Mr. Obama ahead 52 per cent to 41 per cent.

      But attention is increasingly settling on key battleground states, where the two candidates are competing for the electoral votes they need to win the White House on Nov. 4.

      Polls on Tuesday showed the Democrats leading in all of the battleground states won by John Kerry in 2004 and several won by Republican President George W. Bush.

      A CNN poll Tuesday had Mr. Obama leading in Colorado by a margin of 51 to 47 per cent. In Florida, he was ahead 49 to 45, within the poll's margin of error.

      The same poll found Mr. McCain leading in Indiana 51 per cent to 46 per cent, and in Georgia 53 per cent to 45 per cent.

      It was reported this week that the McCain campaign had effectively given up on Colorado, Iowa and New Mexico, states the party had once believed would lead them to victory.

      But Jill Hazelbaker, Mr. McCain's national communications director, released a statement Tuesday denying the report.

      “We see the race tightening both internally and in public polling,” she said. “We are within striking distance in the key battleground states we need to win.”更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • 关键还是美国,估计老麦还是会赢。老奥那套cnn里比喻为万圣节里来糖的孩子分给不出去要糖的孩子,这不是美国的作风。
      • CNN: With big lead, Obama says McCain is 'running out of time'Story Highlights. Barack Obama holds 9-point lead over John McCain
        本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛(CNN) -- With less than two weeks until Election Day, Sen. Barack Obama is telling voters that Sen. John McCain is "running out of time" and as a result has taken to "making stuff up" on Obama's record and tax cut plan.


        Sen. Barack Obama has a sizeable lead over Sen. John McCain in the national polls.

        Obama holds his biggest lead yet, according to CNN's latest average of national polls. He is ahead of McCain by nine points -- 51 percent to 42 percent.

        Tuesday's poll of polls shows that Obama has "moved into a commanding position in the presidential race," said Alan Silverleib, CNN's senior political researcher.

        "Obama is either tied or ahead in all of the battleground states," Silverleib said. "The Democrats now have what may be a decisive edge in terms of voter enthusiasm and financial resources ... While anything can happen in the remaining two weeks, it's hard not to conclude that McCain's back is against the wall." Watch more on the state of the race »

        As McCain tries to regain his footing, he's been hammering away at the now highly publicized remarks Obama made to a man since dubbed "Joe the plumber."

        Earlier this month, Joe Wurzelbacher unintentionally stepped onto the political scene when Obama was canvassing for support in Holland, Ohio.

        Wurzelbacher asked Obama if he believed in the American Dream. He said he was about to buy a company that makes more than $250,000 a year and was concerned that Obama would tax him more because of it.

        Obama explained his tax plan in depth, saying it's better to lower taxes for Americans who make less money so that they could afford to buy from his business.

        "I think that when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody," Obama told Wurzelbacher.

        Obama told voters Tuesday night that McCain has "decided to make up, just fabricate this notion that I've been attacking Joe the plumber."

        "Now, let me tell you something even just yesterday, Joe the plumber himself said that wasn't true. I've got nothing but love for Joe the plumber. That's why I want to give him a tax cut," he said at a rally in Miami, Florida.

        "Apparently Sen. McCain decided that if he can't beat our ideas, then he's just going to make up some ideas and run against those."

        Obama's said McCain has been on the attack instead of talking about the issues.

        "That's what you do when you're out of ideas, when you're out of touch, and you're running out of time," he said.

        McCain's campaign on Wednesday launched a new ad that continues the Joe the plumber line.

        The ad focuses on small business owners who express concern that their businesses would struggle under Obama's tax plan.

        "Barack Obama: higher taxes, more spending, not ready," the announcer says in the 30-second spot. Fact check: Obama and small businesses

        Meanwhile, with limited time left on the campaign trail, the candidates are spending their final days in the most contested states.

        Obama on Wednesday is holding rallies in Richmond and Leesburg, Virginia. Virginia has not voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in more than 40 years, but polls show Obama leading there.

        Sen. Joe Biden, Obama's running mate, is continuing his two-day swing through Colorado, with stops scheduled in Colorado Springs and Pueblo.

        On the Republican side, Sen. John McCain started his day meeting with voters in Manchester, New Hampshire.

        He'll then join Gov. Sarah Palin for rallies in Green and Cincinnati, Ohio. No Republican candidate has ever won the White House without also winning Ohio.


        According to CNN's average of Ohio polls, Obama leads by 3 percentage points there.

        CNN's national poll of polls is composed of the following six national general election surveys of likely voters: Pew (October 16-19), CNN/ORC (October 17-19), ABC/Washington Post (October 16-19), Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby (October 18-20), Gallup (October 18-20) and Diageo/Hotline (October 18-20). It does not have a sampling error.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • 哈哈有点out了,maccain没有一点机会. obama像个黑盒子,现在流行的说法是给他6个月,是驴子是马溜了再说. 半个世纪来少有的,两个参议员里选总统,两个人都没有甚至治理一个州的经验...
    • Why do citizens in 70 countries prefer Obama to McCain?
      • 投票的人一般最后露峥嵘。
    • 嘿嘿,早上新闻说,HALLOWEEN要到了,最多人想在PARTY上扮OBAMA,第二多的人想扮PALIN,也觉得扮PALIN好扮一些,扮OBAMA有难度
      • 美国很多投票调查时候是参加者故意骗人的。人们最后投票的时候,会仔细盯着工资单的扣税数目。
        • 令人担心的是Bradley 效应是否会影响Obama的最终的票结果。我相信现在的大多数美国人已经摆脱了种族歧视的阴影. 这次会有一个反效应--〉 有些人,尤其是共和党人士,口头支持MaCcain, 投票时会投Obama.
          • 种族不是问题,分享财富是问题,美国的中产已经无法才承受加税的改变。毕竟美国不是加拿大。
            • For some people 种族是个重要的问题。It is true, 美国的中产已经无法才承受加税的改变。Obama represents middle class, and he is going to cut tax for them.
              • 应该说他代表黑人中产,嘿嘿
                • 错!他代表美国中产阶层。如果说黑人,他代表99%的黑人。
                  • 99.9999%的黑人. 所有黑政客,不管党派,统一归到obama门下. powell这事,真觉得是个丑闻.
                    • 他只能代表一半黑人,因为他父亲全黑,母亲全白。而且美国黑人有一个历史习惯,就是不喜欢把他们里面富有的黑人看成黑人,认为他们被漂白了。看看OPRAH WINFREY,支持她的大多数是白人,一个黑人ACTIVIST发表文章说,OPRAPH不是黑的,是白的
                      • 这个观点,jackson也表达过,他还说过要cut his blabla...现状是预选时,在南卡等州,黑人的支持率接近90%,不管他黑人血统占多少,至少黑人把他当自己人了
                        • OBAMA最需要担心的是白人中产,其次是黑人下层,到最后点票以后才可以定乾坤,嘿嘿
                          • 明白了,黄的不成气候。
                      • 黑白难分。
                  • 嘿嘿,如果他代表所有没有的中产,他和MCCAIN的差别也就不会才不到十个POINTS了,而且他也就不需要这么拼命地拉票了。我觉得他很有自知之明的,他知道或多白人或者其他种族的中产不把他当成代表,嘿嘿
                    • 三个代表。
        • 是啊,受欢迎不一定等于就赢得了胜利,选民很难说的了,嘿嘿
          • 加拿大在选举前的民意调查中,各党支持率,与选举结果几乎完全一样,唯一的变数就是绿党,反过来也说明绿党的伊丽莎白太让人失望了。。。
            • 同意!关于绿党的伊丽莎白,能力上还说的过去了。就是需要搬个家:)避开Peter.
              • 美国不是加拿大,要时刻牢记。
                • 就是呀,嘿嘿。以前我喜欢说NORTH AMERICA什么的,我老师总是纠正我说,没有北美,只要美国和加拿大,要我一定分开,嘿嘿
                  • 墨西哥是拉美还是北美?
                    • 应该是拉美和中美洲吧
                  • Your teach has no sense of geography or being a proudly white. Either way the teach is wrong.
                    • 嘿嘿,他是从文化上说,不是说地理,因为每次我说文化,就说北美文化云云,他就指正说,我不应该那样,因为没有所谓北美文化,只有美国文化和加拿大文化,是不同的
            • 加拿大和美国不同了,放在加拿大,OBAMA一定胜,嘿嘿。MAY他们现在发起一个运动,要改变现有投票制度。她不是令人失望,而是太张杨,一定要胜过PETER,太高估她自己了噢
              • 不是她的问题.是选民的关系,谁都希望自己选的MP强势,能为社区多拉业务,多点建设.所以一般的党魁,内阁部长都容易连任.
                • 嘿嘿,我还是觉得一个巴掌拍不响,选民和候选人都要负责,但最重要的责任还是要候选人来负的。我现在对DION彻底失去尊敬,他老人家那天居然还BLAMING别人,说自己表现不错,没有问题,说都是保守党抹黑他,我彻底晕倒,嘿嘿
              • 这样不好,弄得国会里一大堆党,什么事业办不成了。辩论会那时候5个党魁在那胡扯,明显就不如美国两个人的有内容和针对性。反正反对党都冲着总理来,谁管你什么分别
                • 是啊,什么事都有好有坏,不过总的来说,我还是喜欢加拿大这边,因为还是更人性一些,更少专制独裁,嘿嘿