男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
WORLD> America
McCain, Obama hunt for votes in final 48 hours
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-11-03 07:20

Washington - Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain raced through the battleground states of Ohio and Pennsylvania on Sunday, with McCain struggling to overtake Obama's lead in the final 48 hours of the fight for the White House.



US Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama speaks during a rally Sunday, November 2, 2008, at the Ohio Statehouse, in Columbus, Ohio. [Agencies] 

Obama warned against overconfidence at a rally in Columbus, Ohio, one of about a dozen crucial battleground states that will decide a race to succeed unpopular US President George W. Bush lasting two years and costing more than $2 billion.

"Don't believe for a second that this election is over," Obama, who would be the first black US president, told a crowd estimated at more than 60,000 by Columbus police. He urged them to vote and knock on doors on his behalf as the campaign hurtles toward Tuesday's election.

"We can't afford to slow down, sit back, or let up for one day, one minute, or one second in these last few days," the Illinois senator said.

McCain reached out to undecided voters in Pennsylvania, his best and perhaps last hope of stealing a Democratic-leaning state from Obama as the two candidates search for the 270 electoral votes needed for victory.

The Arizona senator is battling to wipe out Obama's lead in every national opinion poll and in many key states, and he and his top aides said he was closing the gap at the end.

"My friends, I've been in a lot of campaigns. I know when momentum is there," he said in Wallingford, Pennsylvania. "We're going to win Pennsylvania and we're going to win this election. I sense it and I feel it and I know it."



US Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain and his wife Cindy McCain addresses while walking into a rally at the John Long Center on the campus of the University of Scranton, Sunday afternoon, Nov. 2, in Scranton, Pa. [Agencies]


McCain planned a whirlwind day of campaigning featuring two stops in Pennsylvania, an appearance in New Hampshire and a post-midnight rally in Miami, Florida. He'll wind up the race on Monday with stops in seven states, including his home of Arizona.

"What we're in for is a slam-bang finish," McCain campaign manager Rick Davis said on "Fox News Sunday."

"He's been counted out before and won these kinds of states, and we're in the process of winning them right now," Davis said of big battleground states like Ohio, Florida and Virginia.

Playing Defense

A flurry of new opinion polls on Sunday offered only slight evidence to back up Davis's claim. One new survey showed McCain slightly ahead in Ohio, although others showed Obama leading.

Obama has an edge in most other key battleground states, although his advantage has been whittled down in Florida, Virginia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

McCain must defend about a dozen states won by Republican Bush in 2004, and needs to win nearly all of them.

Both candidates drove home their main themes in the final days of the race, with Obama linking McCain to Bush and adding a new twist with an advertisement tying McCain to the equally disliked Vice President Dick Cheney.

"I'm delighted to support John McCain," Cheney says in the ad, shot at a campaign event on Saturday in Wyoming. He also praises McCain's running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. "That's not the change we need," the ad's announcer said.

McCain continued to slam Obama as a liberal who would raise taxes on small businesses. Obama has said he will raise taxes on those making more than $250,000 a year.

As Obama boarded his campaign plane for Ohio on Sunday morning in Missouri, a reporter asked how he would structure the $700 billion bailout of US financial firms recently approved by Congress.

"We're on a tarmac," Obama replied. When the reporter asked why he would not hold a news conference, Obama said: "I will. On Wednesday." A campaign spokeswoman later said plans for a news conference were not firm but it would be sometime this week.

In Ohio, Obama offered rare praise for McCain, applauding his comic turn on NBC's "Saturday Night Live."

"John McCain was funny yesterday on 'Saturday Night Live,'" Obama said. "That's part of what politics should be about, being able to laugh at each other but also laugh at ourselves."

Obama's campaign has focused on getting supporters to vote early, hoping to lock in backing from new and sporadic voters who otherwise might not turn out to the polls.  An estimated 30 percent of voters will have cast their ballots by the time polls open on Tuesday, and Democrats have been encouraged by the early results.

Obama's chief strategist, David Axelrod, noted Democrats have had an advantage in early voting in key states like Colorado and Florida.

"In Colorado last time, the Republicans had an 8-point edge in early voting. We have an edge now," Axelrod said on ABC's "This Week."

"In Florida, they finished early voting and absentee voting 40,000 votes ahead. We think we're going to have a 350,000 vote edge," he said.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 兰考县| 黄大仙区| 河曲县| 辉南县| 岗巴县| 游戏| 赤水市| 马尔康县| 休宁县| 渭源县| 乌拉特前旗| 静安区| 雷州市| 静海县| 大理市| 建湖县| 内丘县| 霍林郭勒市| 丰县| 凤山市| 岗巴县| 黄梅县| 农安县| 平利县| 栾川县| 乌兰县| 沁源县| 四会市| 贺州市| 墨江| 满城县| 泰州市| 青州市| 栖霞市| 东乌珠穆沁旗| 德兴市| 右玉县| 龙陵县| 茌平县| 达拉特旗| 松桃| 岱山县| 井冈山市| 西盟| 泗水县| 玉林市| 县级市| 顺平县| 东阳市| 满城县| 北辰区| 临城县| 南溪县| 汝州市| 奉化市| 涪陵区| 芜湖市| 岚皋县| 绍兴市| 嘉义市| 登封市| 巧家县| 营口市| 平潭县| 北票市| 澳门| 东光县| 淅川县| 舞阳县| 湖南省| 余江县| 河津市| 澄迈县| 普陀区| 晋城| 綦江县| 乌鲁木齐市| 兴宁市| 慈利县| 拜泉县| 常熟市| 西盟|