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Obama Ad: Just Look at McCain's Economic Advisers!

The Obama campaign already has a new ad out, set to begin airing on national cable tomorrow, responding to John McCain's ad that alleged Obama was being advised on the economy by former Fannie Mae head Franklin Raines.

This ad goes after John McCain for his professed lack of economic knowledge, and his economic advisers:

"Carly Fiorina, the fired CEO who got a $42 million golden parachute," the announcer says. "Phil Gramm, the ex-Senator who pushed through deregulation, and called Americans hurt by this economy 'whiners.'"

And this particularly damaging connection: "Then there's George Bush, whose disastrous policies McCain wants to continue."


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The Obama team is quickly and wisely learning not let an attack go untested.

What's the difference between McCain/Palin and McCain/Bush?

Lipstick!

That is a winner:

McPalin = McBush + Lipstick!

Ha! Good one.

Too bad they couldn't squeeze in the fact that HP just laid off 24,000 employees.

One difference: 100% accurate

BTW the republican group vets for freedom are running ads attacking Obama over the surge, they have a video of it on there website.
Ive seen a couple of the ads on TV in the last hour (NC)

I just saw it too in AZ.... but boy does it sound out of touch with the economy dominating the news. I was like "who the eff cares, have these idiots watched Wall Street lately"?...

What's more, the way this ad is constructed, their unspoken point seems to be that McCain will see that the surge goes on working for years and years.

Is that the message they really wanna go with; even by implication?

They are running it nationally since I see it here as well in NY. The 527's are out in full force hmmm.

That's more like it. Well, let's make sure they have money for ad buys... will probably donate again next week.

Damn. THATS the ad I was talking about, what, yesterday???

Nice use of the term fundamental. It reminds voters of McCains gaffe, disconnect and subsequent lying.

Ha. Maybe they'll send Fiorina back out of exile to refute that she really didn't get a $42 million parachute. And have her remind us that Palin or McCain couldn't run a company.

I hope in future ads Obama clearly defines himself, rather than solely taking defense to McCain's attacks.

Be careful what you wish for. It's been said, if the election is about Bush, McCain loses. If it's about McCain, he loses too. If it's about "I can see Russia from my house!", he also loses.

So they want it to be all about Obama.

I love it. You see its not that hard to do a ball busting negitive ad that sticks to the issues. its about time

The McCain ads are starting to focus on their baseline theme: Obama may be acceptable, but he's going to bring a whole bunch of crazy blacks with him. And hippies. And academic commie types. But mainly and especially black men. Black men.

There will be a massive turnout against the very notion of a black man in the white house.

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Good ad.

Now I'm just waiting for the one that says:

"John McCain's plan for healthcare? Tax the health insurance benefits your employer provides for you, if you're lucky enough to get health benefits, while giving $300 billion in tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans."

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Obama still has a month and a half. He needs to spread out his attacks to build a steady narrative against McCain. THey have been successful so far in planting the McCain/Bush tie. Once that is fully embedded they can really go after McCain's proposed policies.

Yeah, this week they have to keep the focus on the economy.

And when they do go after McShame's health care plan, they should hammer home these three simple points:

1) Tax your health insurance -- a middle class tax increase.

2) Cause 20 million Americans to lose their health benefits.

3) Increase health insurance premiums by $2,000 annually.

I too would like some positive "What I'm going to do about it" ads rather than negative/attack ads all of the time.

I think this is just a rebuttal to the earlier ad, and could be for media consumption or will be aired wherever the McCain "Adviser" attack is played.

That 2 minute ad he released yesterday didn't do the trick for you huh? Or is that so yesterday?

Yeah, no kidding. When he releases an attack ad, he's not doing enough to define himself. When he releases a positive ad, he's being too easy on McCain.

I demand Obama make an ad that simultaneously makes everyone who sees it not only vote for Obama but also give the max 2300 donation to him and 30k to the DNC while also making them think that McCain might be the nastiest person to ever run for public office.

I DEMAND IT. Otherwise, the Obama campaign is just showing how horribly it's run.

And it has to be witty yet serious.

In 30 seconds.

Snicker. Good one publica.

And, good lord, Jonze, try concern trolling a little less obviously next time...

I like this ad. But I want Barack to run an ad I call "Contempt". Barack speaks straight into the camera with a mean-looking glare, venom dripping from his lips.

"Tonight I want to talk about contempt. The contempt of this disgrace of a president, the contempt of his disgrace of a party, and the contempt of the disgraceful campaign my opponent has elected to run. My opponent thinks contempt is a crazy cussing preacher. I'll tell you what contempt is."

"Contempt is lying to this nation to send her to war, assuming the occupied will greet us as liberators, and then expressing full confidence in a president who stands by while tens of billions are spent and hundreds of thousands are killed."

"Contempt is hiring Phil Gramm, the man who lobbied for a company that kicked thousands out of their homes, and letting him write your economic plan while he attacks his victims as whiners. Contempt is getting thousands kicked out of their homes, and then gathering lists so you can kick them off the voter rolls too."

"Contempt is thinking the American people are so stupid that they'd think you will stand up to lobbyists when they run your campaign. Contempt is screwing up our economy with a presidential term of corrupt economic policies and expecting hardworking Americans to stick out their tongues on election day and say, 'Thank you, sir, may I have another?'"

Knock his teeth out, Barack.

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Yeah, angry black man, that's a good idea.

It's about time he hit Carly Fiorina.

New CO poll with Obama up by 10. Yippie!

Yes, but there are some odd internals...
Black Colorado voters 23% for McWar?

In Virginias: Obama is behind in the 18-29 bracket, I don't think so...

Yeah..... no joke those polls are not to be trusted, even though they dont look bad for Obama. McCain isnt going to win the 18-29 bracket 51-44 in VA, if you think that is going to happen i got a bridge in Alaska to sell you.

and in Colorado, he gets 94% of hispanic votes, and only 70% of the black votes, it seems fishy...

The ad is great. Another great day for Senator Obama today...

Damn, both those polls should be thrown out the window. Those internals look horrible.

For what it's worth, an Insider Advantage poll of Ohio recently had the "Black" and "Hispanic" crosstabs switched. Could be the same deal here.

bwahhaahaha
FINALLY he smacks down that crap talking Fiorina...........

Keep dragging her in the mud with Bush, she was a big Bush fundraiser when she was ruining HP and was on her fire everyone spree........
Maybe they will drag Ol'Carly from the basement now to call this ad sexist....LMAO
FIRED CEO.....SMACK!

I love the ad.

The Obama ads have the added minor virtue of being true. I think the truthiness gap between Obama and McCain in only going to widen over the next 45 days.

Agreed. As Obama has zipped ahead in the national polls, the McCain camp, flailing about, will only increase their nasty ads that assult the very essense of truthiness, and one can only image what lies they will be pontificating on the stump.

I think the Obama campaign itself has finally just found their pitch. I don't think it was easy for them to get down in the mud, especially while espousing "new politics" the entire time. But I think finally they discovered they can have their cake and eat it, too--attack your opponent while keeping your own campaign from descending into farce (like McCain's campaign). In a way this is a "new politics" (or at least a "refreshed" politics) -- not in never attacking your opponent and always playing nice, but in that you truthfully attack your opponent on factual issues, y'know, like they used to do. Of course, it's not an exact science, so there will always be a little distortion every now and then, and even some outliers that need to be called out like that McCain-Limbaugh ad (in my opinion), but this kind of campaigning is something we've been missing for a long time.

I know I can find agreement here when I say that Obama, with his campaign, has really demonstrated that he has the executive capability (not so much experience, but he even has that, too) necessary to be President.

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McCain's Raines ad is RACIST and a HUGE LIE while this Obama ad is TRUE.


As Obama says that when they lie he will hit them back harder with the truth.

Or as Biden says we'll give them the truth and they'll feel like it's hell.

But I have to add that the Rush ad was unnecessary. They could have just replayed McCain saying he'd vote against his own immigration bill.

One of the things that McCain's people have figured out to do well is to tap the racist imagery in a way that allows them plausible deniability and to cry that Obama is trying to play the race card.

The only silver line in what is otherwise is pure disgusting crap is that this stuff only works on people who are already voting for McCain.

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People don't give a rats ass about the surge so they vote vets ad is a WASTE of money.

People are REALLY focused on the economy.

Even before the economic crisis, the surge was not that big of an issue, if it was McCain would have had a nice lead in the national polls back then.

The big question is how Obama addresses the surge question in the first debate. Having Patreus saying victory is not assured is a big help. He needs to find a nice concise way of saying what good is all this lack of violence if when we draw down our troops it will be as if the surge never happened without it coming across as if he is saying that the troops have somehow failed. A tightrope given the way the MSM reports these things.

From Eugene Robinson in WaPo: In other words, McCain is running against his own record.

To cite one example, McCain backed landmark legislation in 1999 that removed the walls between banks, investment firms and insurance companies. That bill allowed a company like AIG to expand beyond its traditional insurance business -- which is still profitable -- into exotic new products that ultimately brought the company down.

McCain, who told The Wall Street Journal in March that "I'm always for less regulation," now asks voters to believe he will be a champion of tough, unblinking oversight. He's shocked and outraged that Wall Street's preening Masters of the Universe threw a drunken toga party and smashed all the furniture -- but he helped buy the beer and told the cops to look the other way.

So my question is: How much of the Obama's new rise in the polls is made up of the fiscally conservative and social moderate Republicans?

Great response, but the best of it is the last line:

“They think the economy’s fundamentally strong. We know they’re fundamentally wrong.”

That's one he can use everytime, everywhere. Short, concise and direct. And he can develop it into other themes to establish the McCain = Bush case.

Goodness I love that fundamentally wrong line. It's a quick and easy soundbite to remember.

I've been waiting for them to get around to Fiorina. Well done. The message is, as it should be: "hey John, you try to bloody my nose, I'll knock you into next week."

And since she got thrown under the bus after her Palin line, she's not really in a strong position to make a counter response.

the ad would have been great if Phil Graham's role in Enron collapse was mentioned. the infamous Enron loophole was Phil Graham baby. why isnt BO going there i dont know.

Similar to my thought, which was rather than write "pushed deregulation" under Gramm's name, they should have written: "wrote laws that created our financial meltdown." Of course, there's probably a way to do it a little more succinctly. Adding Enron in there would be good, too. Maybe: "wrote laws leading to Enron and Lehman Bros. bankruptcies."

Obviously, in a :30 spot, there's not a lot you can say.

Overall, I do think it's an excellent ad.

Yaabut he was a POW, so . . .

I guess McCain's only rebuttal for this would be to holler that he has thrown Phil and Carly under the bus.

Great comeback.

The "Reform" McCain Wants to Forget

A Commentary by Joe Conason

With the markets in frightening turmoil and the public outraged by financial irresponsibility and excessive greed, John McCain has suddenly rediscovered the importance of strong, watchful government. Only six months ago, he assured the Wall Street Journal that he is generally opposed to regulation, but today he is ready to control executive compensation, defend 401k accounts from corporate predators and impose renewed federal oversight of errant markets.

This populist rhetoric sounds strange, especially when emitted by a politician whose circle of advisers include former Sen. Phil Gramm, vice president of the scandal-tainted Union Bank of Switzerland, and John Thain, chief executive of the firm formerly known as Merrill Lynch. But when facing the angry voters who have watched their savings evaporate, the conservative Republican more hopes to sound more like a liberal Democrat again.

He wants to blur the differences between himself and Barack Obama on fundamental economic philosophy. But there is one critical issue where the Arizonan has established a record that cannot be escaped so easily.

Sen. McCain wants to privatize Social Security. It is a stance he has repeatedly taken over the past 10 years in recorded votes, interviews, speeches and documents. It is also a position that he will deny in this campaign. In fact he tried to deny it at a June town hall meeting in New Hampshire, when he declared, "I'm not for, quote, privatizing Social Security. I never have been. I never will be." But the contrary evidence is overwhelming.

As long ago as 1998, several years before the Bush administration sought to promote privatization, he voted to partially replace Social Security with private accounts. He included privatization in the economic platform of his 2000 presidential campaign. He spoke out in support of the White House's ill-fated push for privatization during the spring of 2005. And when that plan started to sink into oblivion, despite an advertising and public relations budget that exceeded $50 million, he tried to save it.

Sen. McCain was still pushing the Bush plan earlier this year, when he needed to persuade his own party's ultra-rightists to accept him as their nominee. During the same interview when he told the Journal editors that he generally opposes regulation, he explained his plan to "reform" Social Security. "I believe that private savings accounts are a part of it," he said, "along the lines that President Bush proposed."

Obviously such remarks no longer serve Sen. McCain's political purposes, and certainly won't attract voters, who never liked the Bush plan -- and probably like those ideas even less as they watch the market ravage their pension funds and equity accounts. Listening to the Republican nominee promise this week to "protect "their retirement accounts, they might wonder how he will do that when so much of the value of those accounts has disappeared already. They might also wonder what would happen to the elderly and other beneficiaries of Social Security if the privatizers like him had succeeded in consigning their future to the same Wall Street sharks he now denounces for their greed and irresponsibility.

For Sen. Obama, this moment presents a crucial opportunity to draw the most important distinctions between himself and his opponent as well as between Democrats and Republicans. By going after Sen. McCain on Social Security, he can assure those Democrats with the deepest doubts about him -- older white working-class voters -- that he is on their side and can be trusted to understand their concerns. And, of course, the Social Security theme fits well with the broader Obama indictment of Sen. McCain as an echo of the president's failed policies -- because on this issue, that he is exactly what he has done, not only this year but for many years.

More broadly, Sen. Obama needs to convince voters that he has a program to address the economic crisis -- and tell them why Democratic solutions are not only in their interest but in the national interest. This is a chance for him to explain how progressive solutions work -- how shared prosperity made America strong and productive during the century when we became the wealthiest and most powerful nation in the world. He should place responsibility for stagnation and decline where it belongs -- on the Republican policies that have created staggering inequality.

And he should emphasize that by every measure, Democratic administrations over the past hundred years have achieved measurably more economic success than Republican administrations -- not only with better budgeting and fairer taxation, but even in the growth of equity values. Stock prices rise when a Democrat is president.

The history is so clear that it is hard to understand why any investment banker or broker votes Republican. But then we've learned lately that they aren't necessarily so smart, after all.

Joe Conason writes for the New York Observer.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

The photograph is priceless, talk about being joined at the hip, waist, and shoulders.

The perfect choice, there is no daylight between them.

One body, a two headed monster. They share the same blood stream, advisors, lobbists, campaign operatives, financial supporters and all the same failed policies that is the poison coursing through the veins of the Republican Party.

Many Americans have been drugged by this poison, the heroin of the mantra of unfettered and untaxed free market economy; sold to them by the dealers whose greed and coruption has them laughing all the way to the Bank of the United States Taxpayer after fleecing them of their jobs (outsourcing) attacking the very cells that keep Americas life blood strong and healthy. And stunting the growth of the remaining good cells through stagnating wages, pension losses, and rising costs across the board.

McCain/Bush McSame/McLame two peas in a pod.

Help us, Obama, you are our only hope. (Star Wars line)

We are in a war for the hearts and minds, but that war is here against consertive fiscal policies gone amuk, without regulations.

Reaganomics, trikle down, proven absolutely a failure. The tax breaks given to the wealthiest in the beginning of this administration has proven that none of it trickles down, the number of jobs created miniscule, wages vs buying power equaled lower standards of living, as I said, trickle down, abject failure. Pssst, pass the word.

Obama needs to force McCain to defend this shitty economy. And I want to hear the term "Bush/McCain economics" over and over again.

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