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McCain generally has been more cutting in his own remarks, and he got more personal on Tuesday. "Let's have some straight talk: Sen. Obama is not interested in the politics of hope; he's interested in his future. That's why he's hurling insults," McCain said as he and running mate Sarah Palin addressed a rally in Ohio. Obama's turn again in Elko: "Unlike Sen. McCain, it didn't take a crisis on Wall Street for me to understand that folks are hurting out on Main Street." Some in Obama's audience on Wednesday said they were perfectly satisfied with his tone. "I think he needs to keep doing exactly what he's doing, which is speak softly, show it through," said Paul Barnhart, a retired real estate appraiser in the Elko crowd of about 1,500 people. "I think most Americans are pretty fed up and sick and tired of the bickering and the battling back and forth. I am." Holly Black, a special education teacher in Elko, agreed. "I don't believe in the trash-talking. I believe he is aggressive." As for the tight campaign, David Axelrod, Obama's chief strategist, said, "We never anticipated anything but a close race and now (after the political conventions) it's settled back to where we expected it to be, which is a very close, competitive race."
"We have a lot of targets of opportunity in states that were Bush states in 2004," Axelrod said. "We expect to battle right to the end." He also said Obama has started preparing for next week's first of the three campaign debates that will help Americans decide. "He's been doing a lot of reading," Axelrod said.
[Associated
Press;
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