Posted on 10/18/2008 8:25:59 AM PDT by My Favorite Headache
John McCain Leads in Latest Florida Poll
John McCain- 49% Barack Obama- 47%
Survey USA, a prominent national polling firm, shows John McCain leading Senator Barack Obama in the state of Florida. The Survey USA Florida poll was conducted after the final presidential debate on Thursday October 16th.
Tampa Tribune Endorses John McCain for President
"McCain brings a lifetime of useful experience, including his grueling captivity in Vietnam and long Senate service. He believes in federalism, a strong defense and disciplined self-interest. McCain has been willing to cross party lines to work on tough problems. He co-authored a campaign finance law that failed to fulfill its objective, but he did muster the bipartisan support needed to try to control the buying and selling of public office."
Uncertain Times Require McCain's Tested Vigilance Editorial Tampa Tribune October 17, 2008
The direction of the nation is at stake in this election. Hard economic times, a disappointing Republican administration and the seductive promises of a master orator are pushing America toward a European-style social democracy.
If you don't want that to happen, vote for Republican Sen. John McCain. First, it must be acknowledged that Democratic Sen. Barack Obama gets a lot of things right, especially when emphasizing what has gone wrong. Studiously unflappable, he is the most inspirational campaigner in memory. McCain, too, has many ideas for improvement, but his ch anges build on what has worked in the past to make our nation the strongest in the world.
McCain understands that U.S. companies must compete worldwide and shouldn't have to pay one of the world's highest corporate tax rates. He knows that federal spending is out of control. He knows that economic growth only comes from hard work and real investment, not through wholesale redistribution of tax dollars as Obama promises.
Obama became a political celebrity by representing the disaffected. He is generating unprecedented enthusiasm among the young and the poor, and their participation is welcome. Yet mainstream voters need to understand that the change these voters want will have historic consequences. Obama's future America is largely unrestrained by many of the traditional values long held by Middle America.
Obama promises a tax cut for 95 percent of households, even though only 62 percent of households pay any income tax now. Taxes would increase sharply for households making more than $250,000 a year a policy that penalizes success. Profitable small businesses would be hardest hit. Obama even has the audacity to promise a tax break for businesses that create jobs, while simultaneously increasing taxes that would force some businesses to cut payrolls.
Last year, Obama had the most liberal voting record in the Senate. If elected, he would appoint activist judges capable of finding liberal surprises in the Constitution. He would push for a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq. He would agree to new barriers to trade, which would raise consumer prices.
We urge voters, especially independents and moderate Democrats, to think about where the candidates and their parties are coming from, where they want to go and who the candidates really are.
Obama is a lawyer, a professor, a best-selling author and a winning debater. He is smart and patriotic, but as a leader on the national stage, mostly untested. His short tenur e in the Senate has been unremarkable, other than being consistently partisan.
McCain brings a lifetime of useful experience, including his grueling captivity in Vietnam and long Senate service. He believes in federalism, a strong defense and disciplined self-interest.
McCain has been willing to cross party lines to work on tough problems. He co-authored a campaign finance law that failed to fulfill its objective, but he did muster the bipartisan support needed to try to control the buying and selling of public office.
He is more open-minded on energy reforms than Bush has been. He has an independent nature and passion for public service. He spoke out against torture and strongly criticized Bush's first defense secretary for resisting the surge of troops McCain knew Iraq needed for peace to have a chance.
McCain's biggest challenge is that after eight years of the Bush White House, it's hard to say his party still believes in smaller government. He ha s run an uneven campaign, facing an unfair share of blame for budget deficits, feeble economic growth, costly military interventions, uncontrolled immigration, emergency bailouts of misled corporations, and a diminished world opinion of America.
Yet the record shows blunt-talking McCain would begin to return his party, and the nation, to a more conservative, compassionate and productive path. He is not the candidate preferred in much of Europe and the Middle East, but he would keep us safe and begin to repair America's image worldwide.
A few states could make the difference in this election. Florida is likely to be one, and Tampa Bay will be a key battleground. The McCain-Obama race is a choice that divides families, friendships and even editorial boards.
Obama's vision of hope shines like a rainbow, appealing but just out of reach. McCain's call to freedom and responsibility is less exciting, but you know it works.
The Tribune encourages voters to vo te what they believe, not what they wish were true. The nation needs a stable leader in these unpredictable times.
For president, the Tribune endorses Sen. John McCain.
Bloody great news for a Saturday!
LOL @ this:
“If elected, he would appoint activist judges capable of finding liberal surprises in the Constitution.”
I can just see this: “In a surprise to many, the SCOTUS finds the phrase: ‘From each according to his ability, and for each according to his need’”
Thank God since our favorites the NYT and LAT both endorsed BO! Last night on I believe Larry King, not sure as I was surfing channels, they said the Chicago Trib endorsed BO and that was the first time ever they endorsed a Dem! I find that very hard to believe, does anyone know?
Also liked Lou Dobbs talking about Joe having more media trucks than Bill Ayres.
People are waking up to the disaster that Obama could actually become President.
Excellent.
The Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune on Friday endorsed Barack Obama — the first time either newspaper has supported a Democrat for president.
Obama has picked up endorsements from several other big newspapers in the last week, including the Boston Globe and the Washington Post. He has been endorsed by more than 50 newspapers nationwide, and his opponent, Republican John McCain, has been endorsed by 16, according to Editor & Publisher, a journal that covers the newspaper industry
From each according to his gullibility to each according to his greed.
A major swing state newspaper selects McCain! Great news! With a wonderful endorsement article to go with it!
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Obama Says A Baby Is A Punishment
Obama: If they make a mistake, I dont want them punished with a baby.
I doubted polls showing Obama leading in Florida, while the state has been hit hard with the mortgage situation and housing prices slump people are realizing in tough times we do not need a person who’s going to take more money from us in the guise of helping us.
McCain will win Florida; especially since Florida now is implementing our voter ID law.
It’s CHicago....”Follow the money...”
The Florida election will be won or lost between Tampa and Daytona.
The I-4 Corridor is always the main key in any Florida election. McCain has stayed away from Amendment 2 and the GOP doesn’t talk about it. If they did..Florida wouldn’t even be a question mark right now. It would be McCain +20.
Problem is...USF,UCF, and UF fall into those regions and are filled with some of the worst liberals you can dig up this side of Chicago.
McCain signs outnumber Obama signs easily 4:1 in our area south of Tampa.
It should be noted that for the last 36 years the L.A. Slimes has NOT endorsed anyone for president per their policy. They changed their “no endorsement” policy earlier this year.
The Tribune Co. is the parent company of both The Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune. (Tribune Co. bought The Los Angeles Times in 2000).
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