McCain Struggles on Economy

New York Times‘s Michael Cooper:

With economic conditions worsening over the course of this year and voter anxiety on the rise, Mr. McCain has had to labor to get past the impression — fostered by his own admissions as recently as last year that the subject is not his strongest suit — that he lacks the experience and understanding to address the nation’s economic woes.

The poll also shows Obama is the better candidate to handle the economy.

Romney on McCain

Wow! Even Romney said McCain is a liar and he has no choice, but to stick with his lies. McCain is so desperate to be president that he even put his dignity aside. It’s really a damn shame.

Why Obama’s Health Plan Is Better

Wall Street Journal:

Sen. Obama’s proposal will modernize our current system of employer- and government-provided health care, keeping what works well, and making the investments now that will lead to a more efficient medical system.

In contrast, Sen. McCain, who constantly repeats his no-new-taxes promise on the campaign trail, proposes a big tax hike as the solution to our health-care crisis. His plan would raise taxes on workers who receive health benefits, with the idea of encouraging their employers to drop coverage. A study conducted by University of Michigan economist Tom Buchmueller and colleagues published in the journal Health Affairs suggests that the McCain tax hike will lead employers to drop coverage for over 20 million Americans.

McCain’s Radical Agenda

Bob Herbert:

A study coming out Tuesday from scholars at Columbia, Harvard, Purdue and Michigan projects that 20 million Americans who have employment-based health insurance would lose it under the McCain plan.

Obama Slams McCain on Women’s Pay

A new ad from Obama campaign quoting McCain’s opposition to equal pay bill: “[Women] need the education and training.”

Biden on McCain

Biden responds to McCain’s “the fundamentals of the economy are strong” :

Ladies and gentlemen, I could walk from here to Lansing, and I wouldn’t run into a single person who thought our economy was doing well, unless I ran into John McCain.

What McCain really meant was that if you lose count of how many houses you own than the fundamentals of the economy are strong.