News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Job plunge is topic of the day on campaign trail

Published: Oct 04, 2008 12:30 AM
Modified: Oct 04, 2008 02:06 AM

Job plunge is topic of the day on campaign trail

Sens. Obama and McCain use the news to bolster their cases for the White House

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BIDEN GIVES SON'S UNIT SEND-OFF TO IRAQ

Democratic vice presidential candidate Joe Biden told his son and other Delaware National Guard troops Friday that his heart was "full of love and pride" as they prepared to leave for an assignment in Iraq.

"We take comfort in the knowledge that you are the best-trained, best-prepared group of citizen soldiers that our country to this day has ever sent into harm's way," Biden told members of the 261st Signal Brigade at a ceremony outside the state Capitol.

Biden's son Beau, Delaware's attorney general, serves as a captain and a lawyer in the 261st. The unit leaves Sunday for Fort Bliss, Texas, where it will train for about six weeks before heading to Iraq.

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ABINGTON, PA. - Democrat Barack Obama used word of the nation's worst monthly job loss in more than five years Friday to argue the policies of his Republican opponents "are killing jobs in America every single day." Republican John McCain retorted that Obama's tax and spending plans won't solve the problem.

The government reported employers cut 159,000 jobs last month, the ninth straight month of job losses. The crowd gathered to hear Obama at a Pennsylvania high school football field booed when he told them the numbers and again when he told them McCain recently said the economy is fundamentally strong and has made great progress under President Bush.

The Illinois senator encouraged voters to change the Republican leadership in the White House that he said hasn't worked. He disputed McCain running mate Sarah Palin's claim in Thursday night's debate that his own spending plan would be a job killer.

"When Senator McCain and his running mate talk about job killing, that's something they know a thing or two about," Obama said. "Because the policies they've supported and are supporting are killing jobs in America every single day."

Hours later at a town hall meeting in Pueblo, Colo., McCain said Obama's plans would hurt the economy.

"He wants higher taxes, more government, higher spending, and frankly that record is not something which has been good for America, and we won't let it happen," McCain said. The McCain campaign launched a new national TV ad Friday repeating his criticisms of Obama's tax plans.

Their dispute came as Congress approved a $700 billion measure to bail out the financial industry. Both campaigns said their candidates called lawmakers on behalf of the bill. Members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., and Reps. Elijah Cummings and Donna Edwards, both Maryland Democrats, credited Obama with changing their minds.

McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said, "He's made a number of calls today. We are not releasing specifics at this time." But Republican Rep. Sue Myrick of North Carolina, who switched her vote to favor the measure, said she hadn't heard from McCain. "They told me he was going to call me. He didn't," she said.

Speaking to reporters upon landing in Flagstaff, Ariz., McCain took credit for helping push the bailout through Congress. Last week he briefly rearranged his campaign schedule to go to Washington as lawmakers began considering the package. He left to debate Obama but returned last weekend before the first House vote.

"I'm glad I suspended my campaign and went back to Washington to help bring House Republicans to the table," McCain said.

Despite Congress' passage of the bailout, there was no indication the Wall Street crisis would give way to other campaign issues.

Obama is seeking to solidify his lead in national and battleground polls. McCain, meanwhile, looks for a game-changing development to close a gap that grew in part because he struggled to respond to the financial crisis and because economic woes tend to push voters toward Democratic candidates.

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