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McCain, Obama ratchet up attacks in final days

GOP candidate says Dem backed Big Oil; Obama blasts economic record

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Sen. John McCain acknowledges the cheers of supporters during a campaign rally at Defiance Junior High School in Defiance, Ohio., Thursday.
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Obama: Why keep driving down a dead-end?
Oct. 30: Barack Obama tells a Florida rally that John McCain has been in the passenger seat as George Bush drove the economy down.

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How McCain can still win
Oct. 30: NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd discusses how Republican presidential candidate John McCain could win the presidency despite lagging in recent polls.

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Turning Point: 2008
Nov. 5: NBC's Tom Brokaw recaps the historic election of America's first black president. Produced by msnbc.com's Kevin Flynn.

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U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator McCain points into the crowd at an airport campaign rally in Roswell
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Final push
Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain make their final appeals to voters.
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updated 3:17 p.m. ET Oct. 30, 2008

SARASOTA, Fla. - Seizing on word the economy shrank, Democrat Barack Obama said Thursday Republican rival John McCain would "keep driving down this dead-end street." McCain cited record oil company profits to argue that Obama's rhetoric obscures his voting record on tax breaks for Big Oil.

Speaking at a baseball field in sun-splashed Florida, Obama seized on new federal data showing that the economy shrank in the third quarter of the year to criticize McCain and link him to President Bush. Consumers cut back their spending by the biggest amount in 28 years, the strongest sign yet of a recession.

Obama told around 13,000 supporters that McCain is like a passenger in a car, waiting to take the wheel from Bush and keep the country off course. He used the same analogy in a new negative ad.

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"After nine straight months of job losses, the largest drop in home values on record, wages lower than they've been in a decade, why would we keep driving down this dead-end street?" Obama said.

McCain, meanwhile, used a chilly rally outside a school in Defiance, Ohio to cast himself as the election's real agent of change. He seized on record oil company profit reports to draw a sharp new distinction with Obama, saying the Democrat's rhetoric masks his votes backing new tax breaks for the industry.

"I voted against it," said McCain. "When I'm president, we're not going to let that happen."

McCain was referring to a report from Exxon Mobil Corp. saying it earned $14.83 billion in the third quarter, the largest profit report in the nation's history

"Senator Obama voted four billions in corporate giveaways to the oil companies," said McCain. "We're going to invest in all energy technologies."

McCain, though he did not mention it specifically, was likely referring to Obama's 2005 vote on a Republican-crafted energy bill dubbed by some critics as the "Bush-Cheney energy bill." McCain voted against the legislation.

Obama and other Democrats supported the bill after many of the administration's proposals were removed and billions of dollars in tax breaks for alternative energy and conservation were added.

The legislation included nearly $3 billion in tax breaks for the oil and natural gas industry including some — but not all — that would benefit the largest oil producers such as Exxon Mobil Corp. It also had $11.4 billion in tax incentives for alternative energy and efficiency programs, cited by Obama as his reason for supporting the legislation.

'We're all Joe'
With just five days until the election and lagging in most polls, McCain was setting aside two full days for a splashy bus tour of Ohio, a state aides concede he needs to win if he hopes to build the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House.

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McCain slams Obama on tax policy
Oct. 30: Campaigning in Ohio, Sen. John McCain argued that his Democratic rival wants to raise taxes and “increase your spending by a trillion dollars.” NBC’s Kelly O’Donnell reports.

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There was one awkward moment in the rally, when McCain introduced "Joe the Plumber," an Ohio plumber who confronted Obama on taxes earlier this month and has become a staple of McCain's stump speech ever since. He turned out not to be at the rally, but McCain just shrugged and said, "We're all Joe the plumber."

The real plumber, Joe Wurzelbacher of Toledo, finally was found in Sandusky, Ohio, later Thursday and appeared with McCain.

Obama's campaign aides cast the Democrat's newest TV ads, two 30-second spots, as their "closing argument" for an Obama presidency.

One ad shows a man adjusting the rearview mirror in his car only to see Bush — and the unpopular president pops up again in a side mirror. The ad goes on to use highway signs to point to various McCain policies and ends with both McCain and Bush in the rear mirror amid the warning: "Look behind you. We can't afford more of the same."

McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds countered that "Barack Obama's economic proposals are driven by job-killing tax increases and out-of-control spending." He added, "Barack Obama would drive this sputtering economy off a cliff."

The other ad focuses on Obama himself and his pledge to bring Americans together. The spot also notes that former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a Republican, and billionaire investor Warren Buffett are Obama supporters.


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