by John McCormick
READING, Pa. - With the clock rapidly running out before Tuesday's Pennsylvania primary, Sen. Barack Obama is working to make sure there are no questions from voters left unanswered.
Even as seats started to empty in the upper deck of a high school gymnasium here, the Illinois Democrat just kept taking questions from supporters during a "town hall" appearance that lasted more than a hour.
(That is a different stance than for reporters traveling with him, who have not been granted a question-and-answer session with the senator for nine days now.)
Although Obama had some criticism for Sen. John McCain, he also seemed to offer more praise than usual for the Arizona Republican.
"You have a real choice in this election, you know. Either Democrat would be better than John McCain," Obama started.
He probably could have just stopped right there. But then Obama continued in a way that could be viewed as conflicting at least slightly with his standard line about McCain representing a "third term" of President Bush.
"And all three of us would be better than George Bush," Obama added, referencing himself, Sen. Hillary Clinton and McCain.
Obama kept most of his focus, however, on Clinton, who needs a win in Pennsylvania to keep her campaign alive.
"I know there may be some folks here who are undecided, so I just want to make clear my argument, my closing argument in the last few days before the Pennsylvania primary," Obama said.
After first praising Clinton as "tenacious" and someone who has "done good work on behalf of her constituents in New York," Obama used a line of attack he often exercised in the closing days of his Iowa campaign.
"She says that lobbyists are real people and they represent real people and so it's not a problem that we have lobbyists and special interests funding campaigns," Obama said. "She's taken more money from lobbyists and special interests than any candidate, Republican or Democrat."
Obama has declined to accept contributions from federal lobbyists, although he does accept money from state lobbyists and those with strong ties to firms that do lobbying work.
"She's running ads now suggesting otherwise," he said. "In this campaign, I have not taken that money and nobody can dispute that, and if we get some, we give it back."
Obama also acknowledged the ugliness of the nomination fight.
"Our campaign's not perfect," he said. "There have been times when, you know, if you get elbowed enough, you eventually start elbowing back."
Noting the area's economic struggles, including the loss of candy making jobs to Mexico at a plant operated by The Hershey Co., Obama said he would work to change the nation's economic plight.
At almost every stop this weekend, Obama has mentioned a crowd he drew in Philadelphia Friday evening. Campaign aides said it totaled 35,000, the largest of his campaign.
"This is a feisty crowd," Obama told the audience here, which his campaign said totaled about 2,600. "What did you all eat this morning?"
Before this stop, Obama attended church services in Lebanon and also visited a diner to shake hands in Robesonia, Pa.
As he left the Heidelberg Family Restaurant, Obama said he was convinced that he had won over some votes by just stopping by.
"Absolutely," he said. "There's no doubt about it."
Obama is expected to hold an evening rally in Scranton, Pa.







Comments
Finger for Hillary????
Low LIfe!
REAL MEN VOTE FOR HILLARY!
Posted by: Sean McM | April 20, 2008 5:07 PM
Is saying any one of the 3 would be better than W saying much?
Of course anyone would be better than #43, a self fullfilling prophesy, -- the Worst.
Posted by: shrevebob | April 20, 2008 5:25 PM
What part of damning with faint praise don't you understand?
Posted by: Callimaco | April 20, 2008 5:46 PM
He is a hapless fool who continually sticks his foot in his mouth. Guess he just undermined the whole Democratic Party strategy of calling a MCBush presidency a third term for Bush. Quit Obama, Quit! Come back when you have more experience.
Posted by: KathyVt | April 20, 2008 5:46 PM
As an ardent Obama supporter, you people even had ME wondering about the alleged "finger" incident. Well, at this very minute, I'm sitting here watching the Compassion Forum, and he did the EXACT SAME THING you all have been talking about. STOP for just a few seconds and THINK ABOUT THAT : do you REALLY think he would do what you've been accusing him of on the COMPASSION FORUM???? YOU ACCUSERS ACT LIKE A BUNCH OF DESPERADOES WHO WILL GRASP AT ANYTHING TO TRY TO MAKE HIM LIIK BAD!!!! NO, YOU DON'T ACT LIKE IT ;THAT'S WHAT YOU ARE!!!!
Posted by: MLD | April 20, 2008 9:22 PM
Well, maybe you're right MLD.
But I don't think so.
Given that MSNBC purposely distorted the order of the performance of dissing Hillary--
Go back to the original tape.
(And then go back and find where this guy regularly scratches himself with the middle finger).
He said her name. He paused. He raised his middle finger and started scratching his face with his middle finger. He said 'she' he scratched his face. The crowd got it. He laughed. He then used motioins to brush her off his shoulder like dandruff or rain water and then used motions to remove her from his feet like she's dog poop.
And now he says it's okay if McCain wins--well, maybe he DID know people were voting him up the repug ticket cynically to let us LOSE in the fall.
I won't vote for him for Senate if there's a green running against him.
He voted present on guns--6 kids dead in chicago 23 innjured.
He voted for cheney's energy bill of 2005---23 new nukes.
And look what GE/MSNBC /nuke/media outlet did for him....turned down the volume when showing the scratchwith the middle finger---so that you won't hear him dissing hillary. And then they distorted the order--showing him complaining nobly about media and then the sound down finger. So they made it look like he'd fingered the media.
So, we get ageism, racism, elitism, and sexism, all in one package.
Posted by: geraldinetoo | April 21, 2008 4:05 AM