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Kerry: Bush driving oil price
12/10/2004 18:02 - (SA)
Denver - In a last-minute flurry of accusations before their final debate, challenger John Kerry tried to tie President George W Bush to record oil prices while the president charged that his Democratic opponent has totally misunderstood the war on terror.
On the way to the debate that will range over domestic issues from the economy to health care, Bush is reaching out to military supporters in Colorado Springs, where the war in Iraq is the chief concern.
Bush's campaigning on Tuesday in the conservative heart of Colorado is an effort to counter Kerry's surprising bid to win a state that has voted Republican in nine of the past 11 presidential elections. One poll shows Bush ahead in Colorado; another shows the two men in a close race.
"Kerry is here to try to make up electoral votes he can't get in the South," said Colorado College political science professor Bob Loevy. "John Kerry and the Democrats are setting a tall order for themselves by making a play for Colorado."
Nationally, a CNN/USA Today poll taken on Saturday and Sunday showed Bush and Kerry in a statistical dead heat, with 49% for the Democrat and 48% for Bush among likely voters. The poll's margin of error was 4 percentage points.
The two men meet for their third and final debate on Wednesday night at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona.
On Monday, Kerry lashed out at a president who has taken to calling the Democrat a "tax-and-spend liberal" with a 20-year senate record of voting in favour of tax increases.
Middle-class Americans
The record price of oil "means a lot more profit for this president's friends in the oil industry. "But for most middle class Americans, the Bush tax increase is a tax increase that they can't afford," Kerry said in New Mexico.
Bush, also campaigning in New Mexico, ridiculed Kerry for saying in an interview published on Sunday in The New York Times Magazine, "We have to get back to the place we were, where terrorists are not the focus of our lives but they're a nuisance.
"I couldn't disagree more," the president said. "Our goal is not to reduce terror to some acceptable level of nuisance. Our goal is to defeat terror by staying on the offensive."
The Kerry campaign counterattacked, circulating a 2-year-old comment from Brent Scowcroft, the national security adviser in the first Bush administration, who said the United States can break the back of terrorism "so that it is a horrible nuisance, and not a paralysing influence".
In Colorado, Kerry could be helped by the senate race involving Democrat Ken Salazar, who has the support of over three-quarters of Hispanic voters in Colorado, according to recent polls.
"With the Hispanic vote, you could have a coattails effect for Kerry," says political science professor Andrew Dunham, a colleague of Loevy at Colorado College.
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