Washington/Greensboro, North Carolina: White House hopefuls Barack Obama and John McCain accused each other of playing politics with the financial crisis on Saturday, stepping up their attacks one day after their first presidential debate ended in a virtual tie.
After a high-pressure encounter in Mississippi, where the two candidates clashed sharply on spending and foreign policy, Obama hit the campaign trail and McCain returned to Washington to work on a rescue package for the financial sector.
McCain, an Arizona senator who some Democrats feared would upset delicate negotiations, spent most of the day working the phones from his campaign office rather than joining talks on Capitol Hill.
In remarks delivered by satellite to a group of hunters and fishermen in Ohio, McCain said the debate illustrated his differences with Obama over Wall Street's problems.
"It was clear that Senator Obama still sees the financial crisis in America as a national problem to be exploited first and solved later," he said.
Testing moment
"This is a moment of great testing, when the future of our economy is on the line, and I am determined to help achieve a legislative package to help avoid the worst."
Obama, an Illinois senator, and his running mate Joe Biden, meanwhile, took turns criticising McCain on the economy and his ties to unpopular President George W. Bush at a rally in North Carolina.
They also made digs at McCain for jumping off the campaign trail on Thursday to join bailout talks, a move some called a political stunt less than six weeks before the November 4 presidential election.
"George Bush has dug us into a deep hole. John McCain was carrying the shovel. It's going to take time to dig ourselves out," Obama said to a rally attended by about 20,000 people.
"You see, I think Senator McCain just doesn't get it - he doesn't get that this crisis on Wall Street ... hit Main Street long ago," Obama said. "That's why he's been shifting positions these last two weeks, looking for a photo-op, and trying to figure out what to say and what to do."
In Washington, lawmakers were still working on a proposed $700 billion (Dh2.56 trillion) bailout of the financial industry in response to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.
Washington (AFP) Just five weeks from election day, Democrat Barack Obama is making ground in battleground states and slowly tilting the US political map in his direction, new polling data shows.
But John McCain is strong in strategic states like Ohio and Pennsylvania that can offer a plausible path to the 270 electoral votes needed for the White House if combined with Republican bastions and a few swing states.
New polls over the past week and electoral projections by news organisations suggest Obama may be accelerating as the financial meltdown bites.
The latest electoral map by independent RealClearPolitics.com has 228 electoral votes solid or leaning towards Obama, with 163 leaning or solid for McCain, with 147 others a toss-up.
Sign up for the Daily Briefing
Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox
Network Links
GN StoreDownload our app
© Al Nisr Publishing LLC 2026. All rights reserved.