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Celebrity Fires Consume the Media
To Battle Stations
Failure To Blow Election Stuns Democratic Party Faithful Mourn End To Losing Tradition
Looking Past Palin
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A Force For Good -- But Not At State
Palin Saboteurs Want to Kill Her Career Now
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Leaving Home
From Victim To Victor In Black America
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Failure Is Not An Option
Weekly Review
Keeping Cool Over Joe Lieberman
Leaders Duck And Hide While Wall Street Steals From Us
Obama's Call To Service Meets The Economic Meltdown
A Bridge We Need
Trusting Paulson
The Secret Of Happiness
History Is Screaming
'Keynsian Moment' Needed To Fight 'Great Recession'
A Lemon Of A Bailout
For Obama, A Game Of High-Stakes Fiscal Poker
No One Should Be Railin' Or Bailin' On Palin
Must Obama 'Discipline' Democrats?
A Warrior Departs: 'Tell Them My Story'
The Insane Rage Of The Same-Sex Marriage Mob
Sarah Palin Is Not The Future Of The GOP
Walking On Sunshine
Hillary Appointment: The Audacity Of Broken Promises
GOP Needs Night Of The Long Knives
Obama's Washington
The New World Financial Order
A Bomb Thrower Vs. Obama Bashers
Let'S Hope Gop Will Give Us SomeThing To Vote For Rather Than Against
Is Gay The New Black?
DiscriminaTion Still Lives
The Truth about Government
Quo Vadis GOP
Sunset For The Old White Guys
Note To Gop: Get Serious About Women Candidates
Revenge Of The Boxes
Change We Can Bank On
Let Them Eat Spam
Choices Have Consequences -- Unless You're Joe Lieberman
Dean: Dems 'Big Tent' Party Now
Don't Bail Out the Big 3 -- Interview With Dan Ikenson
The Other Deficit
Blind Defense of Koran Abrogates Reality
Some Of My Best Friends Are…
In Detroit, Failure's a Done Deal
Evil Concealed By Money
The Clinton Gamble



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How McCain Can Still Win
Donald Lambro 10/3/2008
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WASHINGTON -- When the economic-rescue plan was moving toward passage in the Senate last week, Barack Obama's lead in the polls was already shrinking, and a GOP tax cutter was questioning his proposals to raise taxes on a weak economy.

Both developments revealed the Illinois liberal's inherent weaknesses that John McCain needs to expose to turn around his lagging poll numbers.

First, a majority of voters still does not think the freshman senator is more adept at handling the challenges of war, national security and international crises.

Second, many Americans still harbor doubts about the core of Obama's economic plan, asking, "How can raising taxes on businesses and investors help the economy begin to grow again?"

As the nation's economic crisis worsened last month, Obama's polls rose steadily -- lengthening his lead over his Arizona rival. Near the end of September, Gallup's daily tracking poll showed Obama with an 8-point lead. McCain had been sending mixed signals throughout the debate over the administration's $700 billion rescue package. The two men had a split decision in their first debate, but the worsening economy trumped all that, boosting Obama's demands for a fresh change in leadership.

Last week, during the ups and downs of the House's stunning rejection of the rescue plan and
its revival with an overwhelming vote of approval in the Senate, Gallup showed Obama's lead shrinking to 7 percent, then 6 percent, and to a narrower 4 percent edge by week's end.

McCain was fighting two opponents: Obama and a monster economic crisis that should have crushed him long ago. He showed he could handle Obama in a debate, but an economy that is now verging on the edge of recession -- and may fall into negative growth in this quarter -- was much harder to overcome.

McCain campaign strategists last week were hoping that the economic-rescue bill would ease voters' concern about the economy and that the stock market would turn around in October. But the economy's broader direction was headed south, and that kind of headwind posed a much bigger challenge.

Republican strategists were urging McCain to step up his attacks on Obama's anti-growth, tax-hike prescriptions for the economy and to push harder on his own pro-growth proposals: Cutting the corporate tax to make the United States more competitive abroad, ending the death tax, and reducing the capital-gains tax to spur investment in the economy.

Last week, the McCain campaign brought out Jack Kemp, the architect of the Reagan tax cuts, who pointed out the bizarre nature of Obama's plan to raise taxes on businesses in a sick economy.

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By Eric Allie - Caglecartoons.com * Posted 3/27/2008 12:00:00 AM
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