Republican John McCain heads into the final stretch of the US presidential campaign with a 4-point lead over Democrat Barack Obama, a USA Today/Gallup poll released on Sunday showed.
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US Republican presidential nominee Senator John McCain gives a thumbs up to supporters as he takes the stage at a campaign rally in Colorado Springs, Colorado September 6, 2008. [Agencies] |
The lead was McCain's biggest since January and a turnaround from a USA Today poll taken just before last week's Republican Party convention opened, when the veteran Arizona senator trailed Obama by 7 percentage points.
The new poll, taken Friday through Sunday, showed McCain leading Obama, a first-term senator from Illinois, by 50 percent to 46 percent among registered voters with less than two months before the November 4 election.
The poll of 1,022 adults had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 points.
USA Today said McCain got a significant boost from the Republican convention and the selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his vice presidential running mate. McCain also narrowed Obama's wide advantage on handling the economy, the top issue in the campaign, the newspaper said.
McCain said in an interview aired on Sunday he would bring Democrats into his Cabinet and administration as part of his attempt to change the political atmosphere in Washington.
"I don't know how many but I can tell you, with all due respect to previous administrations, it is not going to be a single, 'Well, we have a Democrat now,'" McCain said on CBS' Face the Nation.
"It's going to be the best people in America, the smartest people in America," he said in an interview taped on Saturday.
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US Democratic Presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama speaks to the audience during a campaign stop at Mott Community College in Flint, Michigan September 8, 2008. [Agencies]? |
Obama, 47, has been running on the change theme for more than a year and a half while McCain, 72, has come to it more recently after mostly campaigning on his experience.
Obama in an interview also taped earlier and televised on Sunday on ABC's This Week, said McCain spoke of reducing the rancor in Washington but the Republican convention that nominated him last week was a highly partisan affair.
"How you campaign I think foreshadows how you're going to govern," Obama said.
"Voting with George Bush 90 percent of the time isn't being a maverick, it's being the president's sidekick," said Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton.
"The idea that John McCain represents change in Washington is as laughable as his claim that he'll take on the special interests when some of the biggest corporate lobbyists in America are running his campaign."
Obama jumped on McCain's new campaign theme of change, blasting him for choosing Palin, who has been praised as a maverick for taking on corruption in her own party.
McCain's choice of Palin "tells me that he chose somebody who may be even more aligned with George Bush – or (Vice President) Dick Cheney, or the politics we've seen over the last eight years – that John McCain himself is," he said on Sunday.
Palin starts campaigning
With 58 days until the election, the two candidates took a rare day off on Sunday before plunging back into the fray.
Since he accepted the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday, McCain has been campaigning with Palin and attracting enthusiastic crowds.
Palin, unknown on the national political stage until last week, started campaigning on her own yesterday.
Before she was elected governor, Palin had been the mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, with a population of under 10,000 people.
Palin, a conservative with a strong anti-abortion and pro-gun record, has not been questioned by the media since McCain made her his surprise pick for No 2 on August 29.
McCain said she would start giving interview "within the next few days" but did not elaborate.
McCain adviser Mark Salter said later on Sunday that Palin had agreed to a series of interviews with national media, likely starting on Thursday or Friday, and beginning with Charlie Gibson of ABC.
Palin is scheduled to participate in one vice presidential debate against Joe Biden, Obama's running mate and a veteran senator, on October 2.
McCain and Palin were in New Mexico, but taking a day off from campaigning on Sunday. Obama took the day off from campaigning, and his running mate, Senator Joe Biden was in Montana.
(China Daily September 9, 2008)