McCain, Obama get tough, personal in final debate
10.15.2008 11:01pm EDT
(Hempstead, NY) John McCain assailed Barack Obama’s character and his campaign positions on taxes, abortion and more Wednesday night, hoping to turn their final presidential debate into a launching pad for a political comeback. “You didn’t tell the American people the truth,” he said.
Unruffled, and ahead in the polls, Obama parried each charge, and leveled a few of his own.“One hundred percent, John, of your ads, 100 percent of them have been negative,” Obama shot back in an uncommonly personal debate less than three weeks from Election Day.
“It’s not true,” McCain retorted.
“It is true,” said Obama, seeking the last word.
McCain is currently running all negative ads, according to a study by the University of Wisconsin-Madison. But he has run a number of positive ads during the campaign.
The 90-minute encounter, at a round table at Hofstra University, was their third debate, and marked the beginning of a 20-day sprint to Election Day. Obama leads in the national polls and in surveys in many battleground states, an advantage built in the weeks since the nation stumbled into the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression.
With few exceptions, the campaign is being waged in states that voted Republican in 2004 – Virginia, Colorado, Iowa – and in many of them, Obama holds a lead in the polls.
McCain played the aggressor from the opening moments of the debate, accusing Obama of waging class warfare by seeking tax increases that would “spread the wealth around.”
The Arizona senator also demanded to know the full extent of Obama’s relationship with William Ayers, a 1960s-era terrorist and the Democrat’s ties with ACORN, a liberal group accused of violating federal law as it seeks to register voters. And he insisted Obama disavow last week’s remarks by Rep. John Lewis, a Democrat, who accused the Republican ticket of playing racial politics along the same lines as segregationists of the past.
Struggling to escape the political drag of an unpopular Republican incumbent, McCain also said, “Sen. Obama, I am not President Bush. … You wanted to run against President Bush, you should have run four years ago.”
Obama returned each volley, and brushed aside McCain’s claim to full political independence.
“If I’ve occasionally mistaken your policies for George Bush’s policies, it’s because on the core economic issues that matter to the American people – on tax policy, on energy policy, on spending priorities – you have been a vigorous supporter of President Bush,” he said.
McCain’s allegation that Obama had not leveled with the public involved the Illinois senator’s decision to forgo public financing for his campaign in favor of raising his own funds. As a result, he has far outraised McCain, although the difference has been somewhat neutralized by an advantage the Republican National Committee holds over the Democratic Party.
“He signed a piece of paper” earlier in the campaign pledging to accept federal financing, McCain said. He added that Obama’s campaign has spent more money than any since Watergate, a reference to President Nixon’s re-election, a campaign that later became synonymous with scandal.
Obama made no immediate response to McCain’s assertion about having signed a pledge to accept federal campaign funds.
Asked about running mates, both presidential candidates said Democrat Joseph Biden was qualified to become president, although McCain added this qualifier: “in many respects.”
McCain passed up a chance to say his own running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, was qualified to sit in the Oval Office, though he praised her performance as governor and noted her work on behalf of special needs children. The Palins have a son born earlier this year with Down Syndrome.
Obama sidestepped when asked about Palin’s qualifications to serve as president, and he, too, praised her advocacy for special needs children.
But he quickly sought to turn the issue to his advantage by noting McCain favors a spending freeze on government programs.
“I do want to just point out that autism, for example, or other special needs will require some additional funding if we’re going to get serious in terms of research. … And if we have an across-the-board spending freeze, we’re not going to be able to do it,” he said.





I cannot get over how childish McCain was. All of his facial expressions and his repeated declaration that if Obama had participated in the town hall meetings the campaign would have been different prove this. He is essentially saying, “If he had only played the way I wanted him to I wouldn’t have been such a jerk!” Truly pathetic.
It seemed to me that McCain kept interrupting Obama. This did not set well with me.
Obama plays it cool while McCain gets riled up.
I’m happy there’s a bit more back and forth. A bit more venom for lack of a better word.
Again, it wouldn’t have changed my vote anyway so I’m curious how it will play over the next 3 weeks.
Oh yeah
McCain did much better tonight
I like the fact that the moderator let the “conversation” go on when it was constructive and stopped them when it became circular
I thought McCain was rude at many times
I would have liked Obama to do the same more often.
Given the ideology of this site it should be no question that we all believe that Obama won this debate. FOX News and about 30% of Americans are claiming the opposite.
When the issue of whether the candidate’s running mates were qualified to be President, Obama scored BIG points with me by simply stating that “America will decide.”
Why McCain chose Palin escapes me but clearly plays well to heterosexual males. That choice has made my decision easier.
I’m not entirely comfortable with Obama’s reported associations, but …
Obama/Biden 2008!
Someone (doug) did not listen to the answers given by Obama himself on the so-called ‘associations’. There are no associations. Don’t you get it? How many people/newspapers/senators or even Ayers himself, have to stand up and prove there are no associations before some people will finally get it.
Not even John McCain could cite ONE SINGLE FACT in rebuttal about an association.
You’d think a man with such high intelligence department connections in government would have reams and reams of intelligence terrorist reports on Obama to call upon. But no.
Obama sets the record straight (again) and then McMoron shakes his head sticks his tongue out and mumbles like a moron “facts, give us facts”.
It’s called ‘Playing to the Base’ – which is all he has left. Well, that and another not-so-discreet references to Assasination – which seems to be a new chapter in the Karl Rove Playbook of Whiny Pitiful Presidential-Wannabe Losers.
And in relation to ACORN. Why not do a little google on McCain gives Keynote speech to ACORN in 2006-7. Hmmm why is McCain hiding his associations…with ACORN.
Move past it Doug, it’s all Krapola.
Support Obama or don’t. Just don’t lie to yourself.
Obama won hands down, I don’t care how many times McCain says he is not Bush because fact is he is Bush just a little older and not as ugly, and is running with Dick Cheney in a dress.