The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Obama aide: McCain campaign 'sleaziest' in modern
history
CNN
© September 13, 2008
Story Highlights
- Barack Obama rails against John McCain in New
Hampshire rally
- Obama aide: McCain running "least honorable
campaign" in modern history
- McCain spokesman: Obama comments shows "zero
restraint" during hurricane
- McCain releases ad blasting Obama on immigration
although he voted the same
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- Sen. Barack Obama's
spokesman on Saturday accused Sen. John McCain of
"cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable
campaign in modern presidential campaign history."
Obama, speaking to a crowd Saturday in Manchester,
New Hampshire, said, "John McCain wants to have a
debate about national security; let's have that debate.
I warned that going into Iraq would distract us from
Afghanistan. John McCain cheerleaded for it. John
McCain was wrong, and I was right."
"The McCain-[Sarah] Palin ticket, they don't want to
debate the Obama-Biden ticket on issues because they
are running on eight more years of what we've just
seen. And they know it," the Democratic presidential
nominee said. "As a consequence, what they're going
to spend the next seven, eight weeks doing is trying
to distract you.
"They're going to talk about pigs, and they're going
to talk about lipstick; they're going to talk about
Paris Hilton, they're going to talk about Britney
Spears. They will try to distort my record, and they
will try to undermine your trust in what the Democrats
intend to do."
Asked why the campaign's tone was different from its
tone during Hurricane Gustav, Obama senior strategist
David Axelrod said, "We have enormous concern for people
down there ... that's why we canceled 'Saturday Night
Live' ... but these people also came out because they're
really concerned about the future of the country, and
he [Obama] wanted to talk about those issues."
McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds criticized
Obama for showing "zero restraint" given the storm
and said the "attacks mark a new low from Barack Obama."
The Obama campaign's response was even tougher.
"We will take no lectures from John McCain, who is
cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable
campaign in modern presidential campaign history,"
said Obama spokesman Bill Burton. "His discredited
ads with disgusting lies are running all over the
country today. He runs a campaign not worthy of the
office he is seeking."
At the start of his rally, Obama did put politics
aside, encouraging the thousands in attendance to
think about those in Texas dealing with the fallout
from Hurricane Ike.
"I've been on the phone with the head of FEMA and
mayor of Houston and others who are trying to grapple
with this tremendous storm," he said.
"I know that one of the things that we've seen after
Gustav, one of the things that we saw after Katrina
and Rita is that during difficult times during moments
of tragedy, the American people come together. We may
argue, we may differ, but we are all Americans."
The storm prompted the Obama campaign late Friday
night to cancel the candidate's appearance on the
season premiere of NBC's "Saturday Night Live," saying
it was no longer appropriate given what Gulf residents
were facing.
Obama's running mate Sen. Joe Biden was supposed to
attend the Manchester rally but did not.
Obama is going back to Chicago for the weekend before
heading out Monday for Colorado.
Meanwhile, McCain's campaign said a new Spanish language
ad set to air in battleground states blames Obama and
Senate Democrats for the failure of attempts to overhaul
the nation's immigration laws.
"Obama and his congressional allies say they are on
the side of immigrants. But are they?" asks the announcer
in the 30-second spot, "Which Side Are They On?"
"The press reports that their efforts were 'poison
pills' that made immigration reform fail," he continues.
"The result: No guest worker program. No path to
citizenship. No secure borders. No reform. Is that
being on our side? Obama and his congressional allies
ready to block immigration reform, but not ready to
lead." Watch the ad
But Obama and McCain cast identical votes in the
major congressional showdowns on the issue last year.
Both men cast votes in favor of an unsuccessful early
June effort to end a filibuster. Later that month,
they voted again to end debate on the issue -- but
again failed to shut down the filibuster effort, led
for the most part by Republican senators.
The ad is set to air in Colorado, New Mexico and
Nevada, all crucial states in November with significant
Hispanic voting populations.
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©2008 DJW
Last Modified:
October 1, 2008