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Election 2008

October 9, 2008

Obama calls McCain mortgage plan ill-advised

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Democrat Barack Obama told a campaign audience Thursday that Republican John McCain’s mortgage buyout plan would cost taxpayers billions of dollars and reward bad behavior by lenders.

Speaking in Dayton as he started a two-day bus tour of hotly contested Ohio, Obama said McCain’s plan would force the government to absorb the full cost of renegotiating mortgages to prevent borrowers from losing their homes. Lenders should share some of the costs, he said.

The Democratic presidential candidate’s campaign also criticized McCain’s mortgage plan in a new 30-second ad to air nationally on cable TV, a relatively inexpensive way of drawing media attention to an issue.

Both candidates are competing hard for Ohio’s 20 electoral votes which were pivotal in President Bush’s victory four years ago. Obama plans five Ohio rallies Thursday and Friday, and will return next week to Toledo to prepare for Wednesday’s debate on Long Island, N.Y.

Obama took another jab at McCain, whose family owns several houses, when he renewed his call to change bankruptcy laws to help hard-pressed borrowers keep their homes.

“Right now, the law lets bankruptcy judges write down your mortgage if you own six or seven homes,” he said, “but not if you have only one.”

“That might help Sen. McCain sleep easier at night, but it won’t do anything for folks like you,” Obama told thousands at a baseball stadium.

Obama said McCain’s mortgage plan “punishes taxpayers, rewards banks, and won’t solve our housing crisis.”

He said it would “guarantee that American taxpayers lose by handing over $300 billion to underwrite the kind of greed and irresponsibility on Wall Street that got us into this mess.”

McCain’s campaign, meanwhile, has changed its mortgage plan. When the campaign distributed its description of the plan, it said the government would buy failed mortgages at discounted rates. Conservatives had pushed for that language because many of the homes are not worth the amount mortgaged.

But on Wednesday, the campaign deleted that line, which would mean the government would pay the full value of the mortgage.

McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said the policy didn’t change, but an edit was made to remove “excess and confusing language.”

The move would make the plan more costly than the $300 million initially cited to pay additional funds to financial institutions.

McCain has said his plan is expensive but necessary to get thousands of bad mortgages off the books and to stop the fall in home values and credit availability.

McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds said the plan represents “no new expense to the taxpayer, but simply refocuses priorities to more directly assist the homeowners who are hurting instead of greed on Wall Street.”

Obama said the government should use some of the $700 billion in the newly enacted financial rescue plan to buy up troubled mortgages.

“But we need to do it in a responsible way,” he said. The government should not overpay for the mortgages, he said, or reward “the very lenders whose recklessness helped cause this crisis.”

Taxpayers should be assured “a share of the benefits when our housing market recovers,” he said, and the government should crack down “predatory lenders.”

Saying McCain has offered widely different economic proposals lately, Obama added, “I don’t think we can afford that kind of erratic and uncertain leadership in these uncertain times.” Some Republicans say the word “erratic” is meant to raise doubts about McCain’s age, 72.

Obama’s campaign criticized McCain’s mortgage plan Wednesday, but Thursday marked the first time Obama addressed it himself.

A new Obama campaign TV ad says McCain “would shift the burden from lenders to taxpayers, guaranteeing a loss of taxpayer money” and rewarding lenders “that caused the crisis in the first place.”

Speaking to about 8,000 people under sunny skies, Obama veered occasionally from his prepared text to make lighthearted asides. Stock values have dropped so sharply, he said, that many people’s retirement accounts are now “101(k)s” instead of 401(k)s, the name derived from a section of the tax code.

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Election 2008
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    November 14, 2008

  • Officials: Hillary Clinton being eyed for State CHICAGO (AP) — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is among the candidates that President-elect Barack Obama is considering for secretary of state, according to two Democratic officials in close contact with the Obama transition team.

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  • Hamilton Co. tosses 130 uninitialed paper ballots CARMEL, Ind. (AP) — The pressures of dealing with an unusually high voter turnout and poll workers’ inexperience with paper ballots have resulted in at least 130 ballots from Tuesday’s election being tossed out, an election official said.

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  • Obama calls for swift action on economy President-elect Obama said Friday that the country is facing the greatest economic challenge in a lifetime and “we’re going to have to act swiftly to resolve it.”

    November 7, 2008

  • Students uncover cyber scam linked to Obama video Computer science and criminal justice students at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have uncovered a series of fraudulent e-mails that claim to link to video of Sen. Barack Obama's acceptance speech, but could put a visitor's personal information in the hands of criminals.

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  • Democrat wins Oregon Senate race Democrat Jeff Merkley has ousted Republican Sen. Gordon Smith, a victory once considered unlikely against an incumbent who had highlighted his efforts to work across the aisle in hopes of surviving a wave of anti-GOP sentiment.

    November 6, 2008

  • Merkley’s win in Oregon increases Democrats edge in Senate Democrat Jeff Merkley has ousted Republican Sen. Gordon Smith, a victory once considered unlikely against an incumbent who had highlighted his efforts to work across the aisle in hopes of surviving a wave of anti-GOP sentiment.

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  • Obama adds symbolic NC victory to White House win President-elect Obama won North Carolina on Thursday, a symbolic triumph that underscored his political strength as he turned nine states that President Bush won in 2004 to Democratic blue.

    November 6, 2008

  • Emanuel accepts job as White House chief of staff Barack Obama’s fellow Chicagoan Rahm Emanuel, the hard-charging No. 4 Democrat in the House, has accepted the job of White House chief of staff, Democratic officials said Thursday.

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The Goshen Housing Authority has a $571,050 shortfall. Should the Goshen City Council use money from its $4.7-million “rainy day” fund to pay the debt and maintain the current level of service provided by the voucher program?

Yes, the Council should allocate all the money owed
No, the Council should not allocate any money
The Council should pay what cannot be raised privately
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