Obama lashes out at GOP, Clinton
McCain said the United States is in a recession.
WASHINGTON (AP) — After days on the campaign defensive, Democrat Barack Obama accused rival Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday of leveling criticism straight from the Republican playbook and said even so, he will win the White House over John McCain and an “out of touch” GOP.
“I may have made a mistake last week in the words that I chose, but the other party has made a much more damaging mistake in the failed policies they’ve chosen and the bankrupt philosophy that they’ve embraced for the last three decades ...” Obama said.
“This philosophy isn’t just out of touch, it’s put our economy out of whack.”
Obama spoke at The Associated Press annual meeting, a few hours after McCain had made a less combative appearance of his own.
The Arizona senator announced support for legislation to protect the confidentiality of news sources, although he also challenged the news media to acknowledge its errors “beyond the small print on a corrections page.”
He also displayed his penchant for occasionally differing with the Bush administration, saying he believes the country has already entered a recession.
In his speech and in a more relaxed question-and-answer session meant to approximate the setting on his “Straight Talk Express” campaign bus, McCain repeatedly declined to label Obama an elitist for the comments that have roiled the race for the White House in recent days.
“I think those comments are elitist,” he said. “I think anybody who disparages anyone who is hardworking, the dedicated people who cherish the right to hunt and observe their values and the culture ... and say that’s because they are unhappy with their economic conditions, I think that’s a fundamental contradiction to what I think America is.”
“These are people who produced the generation that made the world safe for democracy.”
McCain’s remarks were his latest reaction to Obama’s description last week of residents of small towns that have been economically distressed for a generation or more.
“It’s not surprising, then, they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations,” the Illinois senator said at a private fundraiser in San Francisco. TheHuffington Post reported the remarks Friday.
Obama’s comments at the AP’s annual luncheon appeared to reflect a double-edged political imperative.
While still locked in a tight race for the party’s nomination, he wants to do what he can to blunt McCain’s recent rise in hypothetical general election matchups.
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