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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, October 23, 2008

McCain-Palin stick with 'Joe'

By William Douglas and Steven Thomma
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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GREEN, Ohio — John McCain's campaign continued to hammer away at Barack Obama's economic plan yesterday, with Sarah Palin calling him "Barack the wealth-spreader," while Obama said their attacks smelled of desperation.

Again invoking "Joe the plumber," McCain and Palin reminded a rally of perhaps 15,000 people at a high school football field here that Obama had told the Toledo plumber he wants to spread the wealth around.

"Knowing that there are a lot of representatives of Joe the plumber around here, it doesn't sound like many of you are going to be supporting Barack the wealth-spreader in this election," Palin said. "And that's because you understand that his plan to redistribute wealth will ultimately punish hard work, and it discourages productivity, and it will stifle the entrepreneurial spirit that made this the greatest country on Earth."

Obama, campaigning in Richmond, Va., said remarks such as Palin's signified a losing campaign that was running out of time.

"They have been trying to throw whatever they can up against the wall to see what sticks," he said. "They have run out of ideas."

Obama told about 13,000 supporters at the Richmond Coliseum that "in the final days of campaigns, the say-anything, do-anything politics too often takes over."

While Obama was in Richmond, he worked to assure Americans that he'll strive hard as president to protect the country from attack. He met for more than an hour with national security advisers in a Richmond hotel, talking at length about rising violence in Afghanistan and how to guard against the kind of crisis or "test" that running mate Joe Biden warned this week would confront him as a new president.

McCain and Palin accused Obama of being dangerously inexperienced in international affairs, using Biden's remarks as Exhibit A.

Obama shrugged off Biden's comments.

"Joe sometimes engages in rhetorical flourishes," he said. "But I think that his core point was that the next administration is going to be tested regardless of who it is."

Earlier in the day, McCain stumped in New Hampshire hoping that a state that salvaged his White House aspirations in 2000 and earlier this year can come through for him one more time.

"It doesn't matter what the pundits said or how confident my opponent is," the Arizona senator told supporters. "The people of New Hampshire make their own decisions, and more than once, they've ignored the polls and the pundits and brought me across the finish line first."