WORLD> America
    McCain and Obama clash on economy
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2008-09-06 09:21

    'He Just Doesn't Get It'


    Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama speaks to supporters during a campaign stop in New Philadelphia, Ohio, September 3, 2008. [Agencies]

    Obama portrayed McCain as being out of touch with ordinary American workers.

    "John McCain the other day said that he thought the economy was fundamentally sound," he said. "Well what's more fundamental than having a job?

    "He just doesn't get it," Obama said. "I don't think they have a sense of what people are going through."

    He touted his own plans for boosting the US economy, saying he would enact tax cuts that would benefit 95 percent of Americans, end tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas and make health care more affordable.

    The renewed battle on the economy came the day after McCain's acceptance speech concluded the Republican convention. Obama accepted the Democratic nod at his party's convention the week before.

    Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who repeatedly ridiculed Obama during her convention speech, campaigned with McCain in Wisconsin, again taking on the role of attacker by blasting Obama for his stance on the Iraq war.

    She told the cheering Cedarburg crowd that Obama on Thursday night finally admitted the decision to boost troop levels in Iraq was successful and ridiculed him for saying it had "succeeded beyond our wildest dreams."

    "I guess when you turn out to be profoundly wrong on a vital national security issue, maybe it's comforting to pretend that everyone else was wrong too," she said, adding that McCain was "one leader in Washington who did predict success, who refused to call retreat and risked his own career."

    McCain has been one of the most outspoken supporters of US military involvement in Iraq, while Obama touts his record of opposing the war from the start.

    After Wisconsin, the McCain and Palin headed for Michigan, where they picked up the endorsement of the 327,000-member Fraternal Order of Police, and later Colorado, followed by New Mexico on Saturday. Obama was traveling across Pennsylvania to New Jersey, where he planned a fundraiser at the home of Jon Bon Jovi.

    A record 38.9 million US TV viewers -- more than one in 10 people -- watched McCain's acceptance speech to the convention, topping the 38.3 million people who watched Obama's the week before, Nielsen Media Research reported. Palin drew 37.2 million viewers.

    McCain trails Obama slightly in most national opinion polls as they head into the election but he promised the Republican faithful at the convention he would win. Polls show majorities favor Obama's leadership on the economy, although McCain is usually favored on foreign policy issues.

    With the conventions out of the way, the next big campaign milestone is the first of three debates, on September 26 in Oxford, Mississippi.

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