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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-02-08 04:24 PM
Original message
Latest newspaper endorsements in presidential race
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/P/PRESIDENTIAL_ENDORSEMENTS?SITE=CONGRA&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Nov 2, 3:59 PM EST

Latest newspaper endorsements in presidential race


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The Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Gazette, for Republican John McCain:

The United States and the world are on the brink of a major economic recession. Our nation also is troubled by unending war against terrorism, immigration laws in desperate need of reform and spiraling health care costs.

But at the top of this mountain of challenges is the economy - the engine that drives so much of our daily lives and determines so much of our future. At a time like this, we cannot succumb to panic. We must not throw wrenches in our path to economic recovery. And as the Great Depression taught us, the worst remedy for this country's problems would be higher taxes for individuals and businesses.

Comparing the two major presidential candidates, Sen. John McCain's approach is best aligned to spur economic recovery. This is the overriding reason The Gazette Editorial Board endorses the Republican Arizona senator over Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

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The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette endorsed Obama:

While mostly an enabler of the Bush world view, Mr. McCain has been a sometime maverick in the past. That happy warrior, however, was missing in this campaign. Laboring under the long shadow of the White House record, his campaign has gone further into the shadows, reduced to peddling fear and guilt by association. The ticket has not put country first, but lust for power.

The campaign of Barack Obama has been like day and night compared to this torrent of smears. Sen. Obama has counter-punched, but he has kept his dignity and focus. His eloquent grace and his commitment to speak directly to issues that matter to Americans - ending the war in Iraq, bringing tax relief to the middle class - have stamped him as presidential in both judgment and temperament.

His very presence on the campaign trail has refuted all the desperate slanders about him. He is what you thought he was: A decent, reasonable and intelligent American who is the only hope to bring real change.

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The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review endorsed McCain:

The only truly experienced leader in this race - the gentleman whose resume actually is worthy of the phrase - is John McCain, 72, war hero, former congressman and longtime U.S. senator of Arizona.

John McCain is fiercely independent. And he makes no apologies for the principles he holds dear, even if they be at odds with the traditional party base. But he has never wavered in his core belief of what Republicanism (with a capital "R") and republicanism (with a lowercase "r") are all about: Small government. Fiscal discipline. Low taxes. A strong defense. And a judiciary that does not legislate from the bench.

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The (Springfield, Ill.) State Journal-Register endorsed Obama:

We believe this country needs healing internally to end the class and cultural warfare that has reached levels today we never thought we'd see again after 9/11. The United States' current international image as the world's bully must be reformed if we hope to effect stability in regions that are now hotbeds of terrorism and nuclear adventurism. Economic recovery, as we see it, is dependent on those goals.

For those critical efforts, we believe Barack Obama is the best choice as our next president.

Throughout a grueling primary campaign that began here at the Old State Capitol, Obama went from extreme underdog to the confident, self-assured candidate of the Democratic Party. His poise on the campaign trail since then is no surprise to us. We saw it in person four years ago when he was a candidate for the U.S. Senate and, later, when he met with The State Journal-Register editorial board again after winning his Senate seat. Thoughtful, engaging and intellectually nimble, Obama exuded a sense of quiet self-confidence rare among politicians.

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The (Manchester) New Hampshire Union Leader endorsed McCain:

McCain has been tested as few men ever have, and he has never been found wanting. Barack Obama has no experience - none. He may be the most unprepared major-party candidate ever. His own vice presidential pick says our enemies will test him quickly and severely. There is no good reason to take that chance.

Those who believe Obama's claims that he will reduce 95 percent of Americans' taxes, while he pays for near-universal health care, subsidizes clean energy, expands our military commitment in Afghanistan, adds to mass transit and highway infrastructure, etc., etc., are living in a dream world.

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The Sheboygan (Wis.) Press endorsed Obama:

On the four most urgent issues facing this country - the economy, Iraq, health care, and energy - Obama's plans simply seem more beneficial to all concerned, namely, the American people.

Both Obama and McCain want to cut taxes. But more of Obama's cuts would go to the middle class and more of McCain's to the wealthy. Trickle-down economic growth doesn't work. It is time to move more of the tax burden onto the wealthiest Americans, those who can most afford to shoulder it.

-And it's time to regulate more of this economy. We need to prevent the greed that got us into this mess, from getting us into it again. McCain seems too reluctant to put in place more aggressive checks and balances.

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The Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal endorsed McCain:

We encourage those who are still uncommitted and those who vote on the basis of a candidate's qualifications instead of party label to give McCain's experience a closer look and to consider the consequences of concentrating too much political and economic power in the hands of one party.

A McCain veto in the White House would provide a check on Congress likely to take a leftward swing in this election. Where principles are on the line, McCain has a history of standing firm.

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The News-Times of Danbury (Conn.) endorsed Obama:

As America has learned throughout the campaign, the debates and the current economic crisis, Obama is calm, cool and steady, while McCain performs in an uneven and at times erratic way.

On the issues, it is clear from the campaign that an Obama presidency would bring about dramatic change from the past eight years - on foreign policy, on taxes, on health care, on education, on global warming.

Barack Obama is a man of intellectual vigor, grace and civility. He offers a message of hope and inspiration. He is a special candidate, and he will make an outstanding president.

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The Republican-American of Waterbury (Conn.) endorsed McCain:

For Republicans in general and conservatives in particular, Sen. John McCain is no prize. He's a centrist if not left-of-center candidate, not at all averse to big government.

He did not distinguish himself in supporting the recent financial-industry bailout and bears primary responsibility for arcane, incumbent-protecting campaign-finance regulations.

But he comes to the table with vast experience in government and as a military officer. His heroism during the Vietnam War cannot be denied.

And he was right where Sen. Obama was wrong in two turning points in recent history: He foresaw and tried to prevent the mortgage meltdown as long ago as 2004; and he was a strong advocate of the surge, which turned the tide in the Iraq war.

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PA Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-02-08 04:27 PM
Response to Original message
1. Everyone expected the Pittsburgh Tribune Review to endorse McCain
Richard Mellon Scaife owns the paper and loses millions on it every year just so he can push his right wing agenda. That rag is the biggest pile of Republican crap ever printed.
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rurallib Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-02-08 04:48 PM
Response to Original message
2. the Cedar Rapids Gazette becomes more and more of a right wing rag
every day. They have had some management changes that push it even further right. And as it goes right, it's demo goes left and the Gazette's business goes down.
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