channelnewsasia.com - McCain savages Obama for playing race card
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
 
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 
 

McCain savages Obama for playing "race card"
Posted: 01 August 2008 0250 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
Obama confronts US economic 'emergency'
Obama returns to bread-and-butter campaign mode
McCain says Obama wrong on Iraq
Special Report
US presidential election

WASHINGTON: Republican John McCain, under fire for a mocking offensive on Barack Obama's star power, lashed out on Thursday at his Democratic White House rival for playing the "race card."

The presidential race took another nasty lurch with McCain's campaign reacting furiously to claims from the African-American Obama that his opponents plan to exploit his name and appearance as an electoral issue.

"Barack Obama has played the race card, and he played it from the bottom of the deck. It's divisive, negative, shameful and wrong," said McCain's campaign manager Rick Davis in a statement.

In Missouri on Wednesday, Obama had said McCain's campaign was mounting personal attacks against him to divert attention from what he said was a dearth of solutions to America's problems.

"You know, 'he's not patriotic enough, he's got a funny name. You know, he doesn't look like all those other presidents on those dollar bills, you know, he's risky,'" Obama said, mocking supposed attacks against him.

Race has not so far emerged as a major issue in the contest between McCain and Obama, who is vying to be the first black president in US history.

But former president Bill Clinton did complain that Obama aides were exploiting the race issue to curry favor with African-American voters, during the Democratic primary race with Hillary Clinton.

The spat was the latest exchange in an increasingly personal contest, and came a day after McCain's camp mocked Obama's celebrity by comparing him in a television ad to troubled pop culture icons Britney Spears and Paris Hilton.

"You know, the last time I saw Britney Spears on stage with a politician, the guy looked a lot like John McCain. Because that's who it was. It was John McCain," Obama's communications director Robert Gibbs observed on MSNBC.

Gibbs appeared to be referring to McCain's attendance at the 1999 MTV music awards in New York, when Spears performed. The singer has since spoken of her respect for President George W. Bush.

"The McCain campaign has decided, apparently, that the best way and the only way that they can win this campaign is to become very personal and very negative," the Obama aide said.

"Look, we're going to let them take the low road. It's a place that they feel very comfortable in. We're going to talk about the issues that are facing this country, joblessness in this county and how to create good jobs."

The Obama campaign responded to McCain's "Celeb" ad with its own called "Low Road," which accused the Republican of practising "the politics of the past." The Democratic Party also punched back with an ad entitled "Desperate Times."

However, polls suggested that McCain's attempts to portray Obama as a liberal elitist who is only at home in the adulation of adoring crowds are making some inroads.

The latest Gallup daily tracking poll said a small bounce enjoyed by Obama since his much-hyped foreign tour last week had evaporated. It said Obama had 45 percent to McCain's 44, a statistical dead heat.

McCain meanwhile is gaining on the Illinois senator in the pivotal swing states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, according to new Quinnipiac University polls.

The Connecticut university said Obama had seemingly gained no traction from his tour of Afghanistan, Iraq, the Middle East and Europe, which was designed to flag his credentials to serve as commander-in-chief.

In a CNN/Opinion Research poll late Wednesday, 40 percent of respondents said McCain was attacking Obama unfairly. But 44 percent also felt the Democrat was acting as if he has already won November's election.

McCain campaign adviser Nicolle Wallace was unapologetic about the Spears-Hilton ad, which came after the Republican had said Obama would rather lose the war in Iraq than lose the election.

"If you came out here with us, you'd see that we have supportive crowds who really ask us about the issues," she said on MSNBC.

"They ask us about the economy. They want to talk about our plans for keeping the country safe. And that's the campaign we're running." - AFP/de

 

 



Other world News
Death toll in China mine disaster rises to 87
Saudi reports 4 pilgrim deaths from H1N1 flu ahead of Haj
H1N1 flu vaccine effective despite mutations, say experts
Obama health drive clears key Senate hurdle
Rain-lashed Britain braces for fresh deluges
Venezuela seizes Colombia-linked paramilitary chief
Flood-hit Britain braces for more rain
US panel says setting Afghan exit date defeatist
Thousands throng rival Nicaraguan rallies, Ortega backers mass
Obama health drive faces critical vote
Iraqi MPs to meet Sunday on election wrangle
British PM visits scene of massive floods
Life term sought for US student in Italy murder trial
Belgian ex-premier meets party chiefs as hunt begins for new PM
Ireland battles severe flooding
1,000 people evacuated after Colombia volcano erupts
Terra cotta warriors of Emperor Qin Shiuangdi exhibit arrives in Washington
Elderly US couple pleads guilty in Cuba spy case
Putin backs Medvedev's call for Russia modernization
Report shows Fort Hood shooter talked with radical cleric
EU leaders face flak as new president keeps low profile
Senate Democrats eye key US health care victory
Colombia military on maximum alert amid rising tensions with Venezuela

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions