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Obama unveils middle class “rescue plan”

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has a four-point “Economic Rescue Plan for the Middle Class.”

Obama was to unveil the plan today, Oct. 13, in a speech in Toledo. Here are the four points, according to the campaign:

Temporary tax credit for firms that create job s in the U.S. over the next two years.

Penalty-free withdrawals from IRAs and 401(k)s in 2008 and 2009.

90-day foreclosure moratorium for homeowners acting in good faith.

A lending facility to address the credit crisis for states and localities that would have the Federal Reserve and federal Treasury lend to state and local governments.

“We’ve already lost three-quarters of a million jobs this year, and some experts say that unemployment may rise to 8 percent by the end of the year,” Obama said in his prepared remarks.

“We can’t wait until then to start creating new jobs.”

Tucker Bounds, McCain-Palin campaign spokesman, dismissed Obama’s proposal.

“The American people heard a series of new proposals from Barack Obama today, but what they did not hear was a promise to stop pursuing his massive tax increases,” Bounds said in a prepared statement.

“As our economy and our financial markets struggle through unprecedented turmoil, one thing is certain: raising taxes on the American people and American business will have a devastating effect.”

Obama has said most Americans would get a tax cut under his plans.

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Marist Poll: Obama ahead in Ohio

Democrat Barack Obama leads Republican John McCain 48 points to 40 points among registered Ohio voters and 49 to 45 among likely Ohio voters, according to The Marist Poll released Monday, Oct. 13.

A month ago, the Marist Poll had Obama and McCain tied at 44 points each.

Among independent voters, 47 percent support McCain, 44 percent support Obama and 6 percent are undecided, according to the latest poll conducted by the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

The poll said both presidential candidates are viewed favorably by a majority Ohio voters, Obama’s running mate Joe Biden is seeing an upswing in his popularity, and McCain’s running mate Sarah Palin is seeing a decline in popularity.

The telephone poll was conducted Oct. 5 to Oct. 8 with 961 registered Ohio voters and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.

Which ticket do you support for president?
  McCain-Palin
  Obama-Biden
  Other


Voter Limit: Once per Hour
View Poll Results

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Schmidt recovering from hit-and-run injuries

U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt, who was struck by a hit-and-run driver last week while jogging near her Loveland home, has been diagnosed with two broken ribs and two fractured vertebrae as a result of that incident.

Schmidt, who was hit Wednesday, Oct. 8 at about 5:45 a.m., sought medical treatment after being hit on Loveland-Miamiville Road, but was treated, released, and back at work in her district office by Wednesday afternoon.

Her spokesman, Bruce Pfaff, said she thought she was just bruised.

But when Schmidt left Friday for a congressional trip to Afghanistan, it became obvious she was more seriously injured than doctors had originally thought.

“Upon landing at the United States Air Force base in Germany on her way to Afghanistan, Rep. Jean Schmidt experienced a great deal of pain and was temporarily unconscious,” Pfaff said. “She was immediately taken to a local hospital where upon a CT Scan it was revealed that the incident on Wednesday when she was struck by a hit and run driver had caused more injuries than first detected at a local Cincinnati Hospital.”

Schmidt was diagnosed in Germany with two fractured vertebrae and two broken ribs that x-rays did not previously detect.

She was treated in Germany and flew back to Cincinnati for examination and further treatment at University Hospital in Cincinnati, and is now “supposed” to be resting, Pfaff said. He said the campaign will reassess her schedule later in the week, depending on how she is healing.

Police continue to search for the person driving the dark-colored sedan that hit Schmidt.

Schmidt, a Republican, will face Democrat Victoria Wulsin and independent David Krikorian in the Nov. 4. election.

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Who helps more - Biden or Palin?

If Sarah Palin visits St. Clairsville and Marietta, can Joe Biden be far behind?

Actually, Biden, the Democratic vice presidential candidate, will be about two days behind Palin, the Republican vice presidential candidate.

Palin campaigned in Marietta and St. Clairsville in eastern Ohio on Sunday, Oct. 12, and Biden is expected there on Tuesday, Oct. 14, as both campaigns ramp up efforts in Ohio’s Appalachian region, a key political battleground.

Biden’s stop will be part of a two-day bus trip through eastern Ohio. On Tuesday, he’s also visit Warren and Marietta and on Wednesday, Oct. 15, he’s expected in Athens, Lancaster and Newark.

Palin and Biden have the same job - to help the person at the top of their ticket in Ohio - Republican John McCain for Palin and Democrat Barack Obama for Biden.

Here’s a chance to say who you think helps th emost.

Which candidate for vice president helps the presidential candidate at the top of the ticket the most?
  Biden
  Palin
  Both help the same
  Neither
  Don't care


Voter Limit: Once per Hour
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Is Ohio’s neighbor, West Virginia, moving toward Obama?

Ohio’s eastern neighbor, West Virginia, has only five electoral votes. But, those five electoral votes have been heavily predicted to be in John McCain’s column on Election Day.

Recent polls are showing that McCain’s lead in West Virginia is shrinking and that state may be becoming more competitive after recent weeks of negative economic news.

A CNN/Time poll in late September showed McCain with a very small lead over Obama, 50-46. A recent American Research poll taken in the first week of October shows Obama winning in West Virginia, 50-42.

West Virginia voted for President Bush twice, but voted for Bill Clinton twice as well. The state even went for Democrat Michael Dukakis in 1988.

The fact that West Virginia may be in play may explain why Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin is campaigning in St. Clairsville, Ohio, just 12 miles west of Wheeling, West Virginia, on Sunday, Oct. 12. Democrat Vice Presidential nominee Joe Biden will be in the same town on Tuesday, Oct. 14. Obama has opened 21 offices across the state.

According to CNN, Palin had planned a tour through Pennsylvania in the coming week, but just added stops throughout West Virginia.

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Alaska inquiry finding: Palin abused power

The Associated Press, in an article by Matt Apuzo, just reported that an Alaska legislative panel decided GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin unlawfully abused her power as governor in the investigation of a trooper who used to be her brother-in-law.

Here’s the just released AP story…

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Sarah Palin unlawfully abused her power as governor by trying to have her former brother-in-law fired as a state trooper, the chief investigator of an Alaska legislative panel concluded Friday. The politically charged inquiry imperiled her reputation as a reformer on John McCain’s Republican ticket.

Investigator Stephen Branchflower, in a report by a bipartisan panel that investigated the matter, found Palin in violation of a state ethics law that prohibits public officials from using their office for personal gain.

The inquiry looked into her dismissal of Public Safety Commissioner Walter Monegan, who said he lost his job because he resisted pressure to fire a state trooper involved in a bitter divorce with the governor’s sister. Palin says Monegan was fired as part of a legitimate budget dispute.

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Palin’s smokin’ arrival

Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin arrived for her campaign rally near Wilmington in a big black Straight Talk Express bus, which drove right onto the convention center floor. With dry ice smoke shooting into the air, multi-colored lights flashing in the darkened Roberts Centre and pounding music blaring, the bus seemed to come out of the wall itself. It was something to see, and the crowd of 10,500 loved it.

Not long ago Sen. John McCain disdainfully dismissed his Democratic opponent, Sen. Barack Obama, as a celebrity with rock star appeal. Now the McCain campaign has its own candidate making a rock star-style entrance, complete with smoke and, apparently, mirrors.

Just before the bus burst in, what the audience saw on a giant projection screen was the bus barreling up the road toward the convention center. Anticipation was high, particularly because U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Centerville, had promised Alaska Gov. Palin would have “a great big entrance.” On screen the long bus came closer, closer, closer and then BAM! there it was inside the hall, coming though a giant door to the side of the stage. Moments later, Palin emerged to take the stage and deliver a blistering speech attacking Obama and touting the McCain/Palin ticket.

But the video apparently was not exactly as it seemed. Long after the Palin people had cleared out, one of the workers in charge of tearing down the stage said the whole thing had been practiced in advance. Although it appeared to be live, he said the video was on a time delay so the bus could first stop and let all the national press people off and get them in place inside the convention center. Once that was done, the video could be played and the grand entrance made.

McCain/Palin spokesman Paul Lindsay did not respond to a request for comment.

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