Republican vice presidential candidate Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, right, cheers as Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. speaks to a rall at the Green Memorial Field of Green High School in Uniontown, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2008. |
GREEN, Ohio (AP) -- John McCain struck an anti-tax chord Wednesday in the state that launched him toward the Republican presidential nomination and in the home state of the plumber he hopes will help him reach the White House.
During rallies in New Hampshire and Ohio, the Arizona senator said Democrat Barack Obama favors taxes that will hurt the middle class and small businesses - despite Obama pledging to cut them for 95 percent of taxpayers.
"Sarah Palin and I will not raise your taxes, my friends. We want you to get wealthy," McCain told 10,000 people gathered in a football stadium near Akron, Ohio. The scene had a festive air, with those sitting in the grandstands behind the candidate dressed in T-shirts that composed the red, white and blue Ohio state flag.
Palin, holding her first joint event with McCain since Oct. 13, derided Obama as "Barack the Wealth Spreader" and said: "You have to really listen to our opponent's words, because he's hiding his real agenda of redistributing your hard-earned money."
McCain and Palin have accused Obama of fostering socialistic tax policies since Ohio plumber Joe Wurzelbacher questioned the Democrat two weeks ago. Both now routinely invoke "Joe the Plumber" as part of their closing argument.
Palin was exuberant before the crowd, demanding an autograph from warm-up singer Gretchen Wilson, famed for her song, "Redneck Woman."
Palin joked: "Someone called me a `redneck woman' once. You know what I said back? `Thank-you very much.'"
Ohio voted for George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004, but Obama held a narrow lead in recent polls. The state offers 20 electoral votes.
Earlier in New Hampshire, McCain implored voters "to come out one more time" for him, as the two-time primary winner tried to stave off a general election loss with sharp criticism of Obama's tax and spending plans.
"I love you. I love New Hampshire," McCain told a rally crowd in a college hockey rink. "I know I can count on you again to come from behind and take a victory and bring it all the way to Washington, D.C., next January."
McCain added: "I'm asking you to come out one more time. Get out the vote."
Although McCain won the 2000 and 2008 New Hampshire primaries, recent polls have shown Obama with a lead no smaller than 7 percentage points with less than two weeks until Election Day. That has prompted speculation McCain may have to surrender the state's four electoral votes and focus elsewhere if he hopes to cobble together the 270 needed to become president.
Senior adviser Mark Salter dismissed such thinking. He said McCain was visiting New Hampshire because "we get a charge out of it. We think we're competitive there. They get it."
In a state with no income tax and a Yankee aversion to government spending, McCain tried to rally his supporters with a touched-up stump speech that focused on both issues. He, too, hit the wealth-distribution theme.
"Apparently, as my opponent sees it, there's a strict limit to your earnings as well, and it's for the politicians to decide. The proper amount of wealth is not what you can earn, but what government will let you keep," McCain said.
In one final jab at Obama, McCain accused him of planning "another stadium spectacle" by planning an outdoor rally in Chicago on Election Night. "Acting like the election is over won't let him take away your chance to have the final say in this election," he said.
New Hampshire political trends are working against McCain. It was the only state to vote for Democrat John Kerry in 2004 after going for Republican Bush in 2000. Democrats also swept both congressional seats, the governor's office and both houses of the state Legislature in 2006.
Democratic National Committee spokesman Damien LaVera noted the trends in saying: "With all the differences between the John McCain running today and the John McCain who ran in the past, it is easy to see why McCain is losing ground in the Granite State."