Democrat Barack Obama, whom most polls show with a sturdy national lead, is campaigning Saturday in Nevada, Colorado and Missouri. Then, in the campaign's final two days, he will attempt to seal the deal in large swing states -- Ohio, Florida, North Carolina and Virginia.
Speaking in Nevada for the last time before Tuesday's election, Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama this morning looked back on a presidential campaign that has stretched over nearly two years and returned to his earliest themes of changing not just policies but the way the federal government operates.
"I've just got two words for you today: three days," Obama told a crowd of supporters at Henderson's Coronado High School. The campaign estimated the audience gathered on the school's football field at 15,000
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Hillary Clinton, campaigning Friday in Kirtland, Ohio, for Barack Obama, mused on what she should be for Halloween. She settled on a politician.
Her thoughts: "I was thinking about dressing up. And I really wanted to be scary. I’ve done the princess stuff, and this time I wanted to be really frightening so I thought I would dress up like George W. Bush. Then I realized: John McCain took that costume.
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Hillary Clinton Campaign for Obama
Obama with Brian Williams Part1 1/3
Obama with Brian Williams Part2
Obama with Brian Williams Part3 3/3
Polls Chuck Todd
Michael Moore on voter turnout suppression Keith Olbermann
Campaign '08's final four days Keith Olbermann Howard Finemann
John Cleese actor, comedian, poet Keith Olbermann
Late Bush deregulation push ? Rachel Maddow
Early-voting nightmare Rachel Maddow
The Palin problem Rachel Maddow
Crunch time Rachel Maddow
ABC Polls
Riding a wave of voter discontent over a failing economy, Democrat Barack Obama has solid leads in northeastern, midwestern and western Democratic enclaves and has mounted surprising challenges in the South and other once reliably Republican states. In many areas, that strength is spilling over to endanger some Republicans running for the Senate, House or governor. The region-by-region outlook:
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Barack Obama has an average lead of six percentage points over John McCain in national polls with three days left in the presidential campaign.
Polls released this week showed the Democratic candidate with leads ranging from three points in a Fox News poll to 11 points in a New York Times/CBS News survey. An average of polls compiled by Real Clear Politics shows that Obama has been ahead between five and eight points since the beginning of October.
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