Onus on McCain to turn race around

Published: Sunday, Oct. 5 2008 12:18 a.m. MDT

WASHINGTON — One month before Election Day, Barack Obama sits atop battleground polls in a shrinking playing field, the economic crisis is breaking his way and the Democrat has made progress toward winning the White House.

The onus is on Republican John McCain to turn the race around under exceptionally challenging circumstances — and his options are limited.

McCain's advisers say the Arizona senator will ramp up his attacks in the coming days with a tougher, more focused message describing "who Obama is," including questioning his character, "liberal" record and "too risky" proposals in advertising and appearances.

Obama's advisers, in turn, say he will argue that McCain is unable to articulate an economic vision that's different from President Bush's. In a new push, the Illinois senator is calling McCain's health

care plan "radical."

Obama has been lifted in polls by voters who think he's better able to handle the economy and better suited to lead the nation through the financial crisis. Surveys also showed that skeptical voters having trouble envisioning him as president started to come around. He's a 47-year-old freshman senator from Chicago who would be the country's first black president.

Utah, however, is among the states where McCain is running ahead. A poll of Utahns immediately following the vice presidential debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin found that most Utahns support McCain.

Sixty percent of 260 people polled by Dan Jones & Associates said they would cast ballots for the Arizona Republican if the election were held today. Twenty-eight percent picked Obama. Twelve percent either named another candidate, didn't know or declined to answer.

The poll, which has an error margin of 6.2 percent, was commissioned by the Deseret News and KSL-TV.

But now that the vice presidential debate is over, the contest returns to being entirely about Obama and McCain and likely will stay that way until Nov. 4. The rivals meet Tuesday in their second of three debates.

Interviews with party insiders across the country Friday showed this: Democrats are optimistic of victory if nervous over whether Obama can hold his advantage while Republicans are worried that the race may be moving out of reach though hopeful that McCain will beat the odds as he did in the GOP primary.

Both sides note that plenty can change in one month — and they're right.

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