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Senator John McCain... Denver CO
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25851020

updated 29 minutes ago

McCain hits key states in shadow of Obama trip
He raises millions of dollars with visits to N.H., Maine, Pa.,Ohio and Colo.

DENVER - In the face of Barack Obama's overseas tour de force, rival presidential candidate John McCain struggled to be heard. Yet amid the awkward moments, he managed to campaign busily in key battleground states and to raise millions of dollars at fundraisers.
Polls in many states that typically swing between Republican and Democratic candidates are close, and some are tightening. The Arizona Republican sought to turn this to his advantage in what was clearly a difficult week to be a stay-at-home candidate.
He repeatedly emphasized his long military and congressional background, scolded Obama from afar on foreign policy, and kept playfully fueling speculation that he was close to picking a running mate.
McCain faced another opportunity to showcase his history as a Vietnam prisoner of war in a speech Friday in Denver to the American GI Forum Convention, a largely Hispanic military group. That also gave him a chance to court the valued Hispanic vote.
'Audacity of hopelessness'
During that appearance, McCain contended that Obama's policies — he opposed sending more troops to Iraq in the "surge" that McCain supported — would have led to defeat there and in Afghanistan.
"We rejected the audacity of hopelessness, and we were right," McCain said, a play on the title of Obama's book "The Audacity of Hope."
Noting that the buildup was unpopular with most Americans, McCain said: "Sen. Obama told the American people what he thought you wanted to hear. I told you the truth."
McCain also visited the Dalai Lama in Aspen, Colorado, before heading home to Sedona, Arizona, for the weekend. It was his first visit with the Tibetan spiritual leader.
Everywhere he went — in New Hampshire, Maine, Pennsylvania, Ohio and here in Colorado — the Arizona senator drew warm and appreciative crowds. No matter that many, if not most, of those in the audiences were senior citizens. Seniors vote in big numbers.
For the most part, the side-by-side images were not pretty:
· Obama meeting with leaders in Iraq, McCain on a golf cart in Kennebunkport, Maine, with former President George H.W. Bush.
· Obama before a sweeping Mideast landscape, McCain holding a news conference in a supermarket in Bethlehem — Pennsylvania, that is — and narrowly escaping an attack from a tumbling stack of apple sauce jars.
· Obama delivering his trip's keynote speech at Berlin's Victory Column, McCain eating bratwurst and chatting with reporters at a German restaurant in Columbus, Ohio.
McCain responds philosophically when asked about being overshadowed by his rival's overseas trip and outsize attention: "It is what it is."
'Glad' for Obama
In the final analysis, McCain said at week's end, "I'm glad Sen. Obama went to Iraq."
However, it would have been better, McCain added in the inevitable dig, had the Illinois Democrat not "announced his policy before he left."
Overall, "I feel fine," McCain said about how the week turned out.
Charles Black, a senior McCain adviser, said that Obama's trip clearly had an impact on McCain's campaigning. "Most of the days we wanted to talk about jobs and energy," he said. "Naturally, with his trip overseas, we were asked to react."
Still, Black said, "in the places we went, we dominated local news."
That McCain would be overshadowed seemed inevitable. No opposition party candidate could have shined under such circumstances.
McCain aides showed clear frustration with what they saw as lopsided news coverage, and McCain himself seemed peevish at times.
McCain has inched ahead of Obama in Colorado, come close in Minnesota and narrowed the gap in Michigan and Wisconsin, according to Quinnipiac University polls of likely voters in these battleground states. The polls, taken for The Wall Street Journal and washingtonpost.com, showed voters in each state saying energy policy is more important than the war in Iraq.
Obama's "post-primary bubble hasn't burst, but it is leaking a bit," said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. "The good news for McCain is that he has improved his standing in Colorado and Michigan, two states that are critical to each man's strategy."
McCain sought to focus attention on energy and the economy, but he kept getting distracted, finding himself continuously reacting to Obama.
He raised the heat of his criticism. Before, McCain had defended his support of the Iraq war by saying he would rather win a war than win an election. This week, he took it a step further, suggesting Obama would rather lose a war to win an election. That subjected McCain to a wave of Democratic criticism.
Timeline confusion?
Then, in an interview with CBS, McCain asserted that President George W. Bush's "surge" had helped inspire the Anbar Province awakening in which Sunni chieftans stopped fighting the U.S. and began to fight al-Qaida. Democrats gleefully pointed out that the Anbar rebellion happened before Bush announced his troop buildup in January 2007 and the extra troops began arriving that March.

McCain backed and filled, suggesting what the administration likes to call the "surge" was a counterinsurgency movement that actually began months before Bush's troop buildup. It was a matter of semantics, he suggested, prompting another wave of Democratic ridicule.
There were other possible disconnects. He suggested he would love to give a speech in Germany, as Obama had. But he said he would prefer touring the U.S. heartland to deal with economic woes affecting Americans. This from the candidate who recently left the country to give trade-focused speeches in Mexico and Canada.
He planned to visit an offshore oil rig on Wednesday to promote his call for more offshore drilling. But rough waters from the remnants of Hurricane Dolly caused a postponement.
That seemed to annoy him the most, aides suggested. And he mentioned his regret at not going to the rig at nearly every stop afterward.

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My View of the above article.
Senator McCain has a SOUND and LOGICAL Direction, unlike the Mystical Obama..who has a difficult time zoning in on his real feelings and views.
Posted on 07/25/08, 06:07 pm
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Reply #1 - 07/25/08  6:43pm
" McCain is confused and doesn't know what he believes from day to day. He's pandering to the religous right and supporters will be voting for more of the same - lousy economy, 100 year war in Iraq, high prices for oil and NO HEALTHCARE OR JOBS FOR THE FUTURE. Run don't walk to the nearest Republican rehab., you are in serious trouble. "
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Reply #2 - 07/25/08  6:47pm
" OR you could live the socialist dream through obama! MMmmmmmmmmm sounds fun.Its lets pretend time with Obama. He gives great lip service. DISCLAIMER- my statement is NOT a personal attack on anyone..accept maybe Obama. "
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Reply #3 - 07/25/08  7:01pm
" While McCain talks to US VOTERS, o'bama fronts for a rock band in Berlin... "
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Reply #4 - 07/25/08  8:06pm
" Well McCain still hasn't figured out Czechoslovakia no longer exists (another gaffe within the last week). Maybe his direction is "sound and logical" but his mind doesn't seem to be. "
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Reply #5 - 07/26/08  12:31am
" "McCain is confused and doesn't know what he believes from day to day"

If he weren't already a candidate, he could be an Obamaq supporter. "
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Reply #6 - 07/26/08  6:10am
" No, I don't think he could be an Obama supporter. He's still stapled to too many of Bush's failed policies for that. "
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Reply #7 - 07/26/08  12:03pm
" McCain misspeaks and he is old and confused. Obama misspeaks and he is just tired, how typical. "
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Reply #8 - 07/26/08  12:10pm
" Hey, Obama! How many states are there? Well, ummm…we’ve been to 57 with one left to go, then subtract Hawaii and Alaska…ummmm…. Unbelievable! This guy wants to be the President of the U.S. and doesn’t know how many states we have! Priceless "
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Reply #9 - 07/26/08  12:30pm
" I can see it now... On Election Night, o'bama will be questioning the tally of votes. Where aer the votes from Berlin... he will be so sure he was at a Democratic Ralley FOR HIS Campaign.. he expects the Germans to vote for him as well.
LOL "
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