Republican John McCain and running mate Sarah Palin were reuniting Tuesday to rally the faithful in largely conservative areas of this swing state he hopes to win in next week’s presidential election.
Though he trails Democrat Barack Obama in the polls nationally and in Pennsylvania – or maybe because of that – McCain was sounding increasingly scrappy and referring to his rival as “the most liberal candidate to ever seek the presidency.”
McCain, who also campaigned in Pennsylvania on Monday, and Palin were holding a rally Tuesday in Hershey before going their separate ways – McCain to North Carolina, another contested state, while Palin stays in Pennsylvania. They had planned another joint rally in Pennsylvania – an event at a baseball stadium in Quakertown – but postponed it because of rain.
“If I’m elected, I’ll fight to shake up Washington,” McCain told a noisy rally in Pottsville, Pa., on Monday night, previewing the closing argument he’ll make to voters as the long march to the Nov. 4 election draws to a close. “I’m not afraid of the fight, you’re not afraid of the fight and we’re ready for the fight.”
McCain labeled Obama a tax-and-spend liberal and warned of what he said are the dangers of having a White House and Congress in Democratic hands. He urged that he be elected to serve as a counterweight to Democrats in Congress.
“Sen. Obama is running to spread the wealth. I’m running to create more wealth,” said McCain, who promises tax cuts to spur job growth. “Sen. Obama is running to punish the successful. I’m
running to make everyone a success.”
Both campaigns were converging Tuesday on Pennsylvania, where Obama is ahead in the race for its 21 electoral votes. It takes 270 votes in the Electoral College to win the presidency. Obama had scheduled a rally in Chester, a Philadelphia suburb, at the same time as the McCain-Palin event in Hershey.
Palin is very popular with the Republican Party base and McCain was using her to energize those voters.
“She’s a reformer, she’s a great American,” he said. “She’ll take on the old boy network in Washington.”
McCain also has been making himself clear about his differences with President Bush, who is unpopular.
“We can’t spend the next four years as we have much of the last eight,” McCain said. “We need a new direction and we have to fight for it.”
Meanwhile, at Obama’s rally, he said there’s no red America or blue America, just one big united country. But not when it comes to getting elected.
Obama’s first stop: a rally in the strategic Philadelphia suburb of Chester. The small city is in Delaware County, a pivotal swing area of the state. Neighborhoods here range from economically depressed to working class to ritzy. Republicans hold an edge over Democrats in voter registration, and both campaigns are surging to get out the vote. Chester itself is predominantly black, but the broader county has a mostly white population.The event is a cross-state bookend to Obama’s appearance Monday in Pittsburgh, where he pledged to cut taxes for the middle class and help factory workers as much as company owners.
Obama then heads again to Virginia, which is offering up political intrigue this year. Obama is vying to become the first Democrat for president to win the state in 44 years.
The Illinois senator was staging a rally at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, an area which has posted one of Virginia’s largest gains in voter registration this year.
At night, Obama will campaign in Norfolk, Va., a major military community. This will be Obama’s ninth trip to Virginia since he clinched the Democratic Party’s nomination in June.
McCain and Palin are campaigning aggressively in Virginia, too.
The transformation of the Washington-savvy northern Virginia region, coupled with distaste for an unpopular president, no longer makes the commonwealth reflexively Republican. Obama’s campaign exudes an air of calm and confidence. He plans to plug for votes in North Carolina, Florida and Missouri in the coming days.
Like Virginia, all of them went for Bush in 2004.
