McCain has become McWhiner and in recent weeks has been taking the low road, low blows. Obama struts confidence – described by some as presumptuous.
A distinct contrast between the two has emerged. Read on.
For all the seismic shifts that have taken place over the last two weeks, we need to recognize that McCain has now abandoned virtually everything he’s been campaigning on for the last year. There’s really no more eloquent confirmation of that reality than the fact that McCain now appears determined to base his campaign on charges that Obama is unpatriotic and despises American soldiers.
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CNN: Hagel says judgment more important than experience
“Each candidate has strengths and weaknesses, and experience does matter,” Hagel said. “But what matters more in my opinion is character and judgment. And judgment meaning who is it that you bring around, who is it that you listen to? Can you make the right decisions for the right reasons on behalf of your country and the world?”
Reed and Hagel also addressed a new ad from the McCain campaign. The ad’s script says that Obama “made time to go to the gym, but cancelled a visit with wounded troops.” It continues, “Seems the Pentagon wouldn’t allow him to bring cameras.” Both Hagel and Reed said the ad is inappropriate.
“It is factually distorted, and it is I hope not a sign of things to come, because there are two many important problems to engage at this point in baseless insinuations about patriotism and about American men and women in uniform,” said Reed.
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McCain On “Thin Ground” With Recent Attacks
On CBS’ “Face The Nation,” Chuck Hagel responded to John McCain’s recent attacks on Barack Obama’s trip abroad and withdrawal plan: “John is treading on some very thin ground here when he impugns motives and when we start to get into, ‘You’re less patriotic than me. I’m more patriotic … “it’s just not responsible to be saying things like that.”
Hagel also said he doesn’t think McCain’s new ad bashing Obama for not visiting troops in Germany is “appropriate.”
Reminder: foreign policy is McCain’s perceived Ace.
McCain Denies He Used ‘The Word Timetable,’ Claims “We Were Greeted As Liberators’
For a stark contrast of the two candidates – a contrast of confidence and courage is reported in:
The Jerusalem Post interview with Obama
Two months ago in the Oval Office, President George W. Bush, coming to the end of a two-term presidency and presumably as expert on Israeli-Palestinian policy as he is ever going to be, was accompanied by a team of no fewer than five advisers and spokespeople during a 40-minute interview with this writer and three other Israeli journalists.
In March, on his whirlwind visit to Israel, Republican presidential nominee John McCain, one of whose primary strengths is said to be his intimate grasp of foreign affairs, chose to bring along Sen. Joe Lieberman to the interview our diplomatic correspondent Herb Keinon and I conducted with him, looked to Lieberman several times for reassurance on his answers and seemed a little flummoxed by a question relating to the nuances of settlement construction.
On Wednesday evening, toward the end of his packed one-day visit here, Barack Obama, the Democratic senator who is leading the race for the White House and who lacks long years of foreign policy involvement, spoke to The Jerusalem Post with only a single aide in his King David Hotel room, and that aide’s sole contribution to the conversation was to suggest that the candidate and I switch seats so that our photographer would get better lighting for his pictures.
Several of Obama’s Middle East advisers – including former Clinton special envoy Dennis Ross and ex-ambassador to Israel Daniel Kurtzer – were hovering in the vicinity. But Obama, who was making only his second visit to Israel, knew precisely what he wanted to say about the most intricate issues confronting and concerning Israel, and expressed himself clearly, even stridently on key subjects.[.]
(highlights added)
While McCain slings mud, or forgets what day is up, or gets a bit lost on domestic policy Obama pivots to the economy, prepping to govern.
Obama to Meet With Rubin, Volcker, Buffett on Economic Plans
July 27 (Bloomberg) — Democrat Barack Obama said he is convening a meeting on the economy tomorrow that will include former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and billionaire investor Warren Buffett as he pivots to the U.S. economy after a nine-day trip abroad.
The meeting in Washington will also include former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich and Anna Burger, secretary- treasurer of the Service Employees International Union, said David Axelrod, Obama’s chief strategist.
`Do Business With Me’
Obama expressed satisfaction with his foreign trip.
“I think voters can take a look at this trip and say to themselves that this guy can function effectively on the world stage,” Obama said.
He stopped in Afghanistan, Iraq, the Middle East and Europe, where he visited troops, conferred with military commanders and met with dozens of foreign leaders. The trip allowed Obama to make his case that he’s ready to be commander-in-chief as John McCain, 71, the presumptive Republican nominee, casts him as a neophyte on foreign affairs and national security.
“The reports of the heads of state that I met with were that they could do business with me and that obviously is what we wanted to make clear,” Obama said.
100 days to go…and Obama is maintaining a lead, Is there time for McCain to shed his flip-flopping and turn this election from a rout?