- India Govt. willing to give safe passage to ULFA leaders Baruah, Arabinda Rajkhowa
- China told no guardianship role will be appreciated
- Indian Government says it has a plan to deal with Maoist violence
- India to get state of the art surveillance gear as part of counter-terror cooperation with US
- US-India civil nuclear deal in final stages of completion
- US to give crucial information on Headley-Rana accomplice's 26/11 role to India
McCain offers choice to Americans: 'Country First or Obama First'
New York, Sept.20 (ANI): Republican presidential candidate John McCain has launched another broadside against Democratic rival Barack Obama.
Using his starkest language to date in the run-up to the November 4 presidential poll, McCain on Friday repeatedly asked the American voter to make a choice between "Country First" or "Obama First"
Though Obama responded by saying that McCain's latest assertion left little to the imagination and suggested that his Republican opponent was in a "panicked" state, McCain warned that Obama will "leave this country at risk," and would not put country first when taking decisions in the White House should he get elected.
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"People like Senator Obama have been too busy gaming the system and haven't ever done a thing to actually challenge the system. That's not country first, that's Obama first," Fox News quoted McCain, as saying at a rally in a suburban Minneapolis airplane hangar.
Meanwhile, the Gallup daily tracking poll Friday showed Obama leading McCain by five points, after he regained the lead two days ago for the first time since the close of the Republican National Convention.
Both candidates are scrambling to address the ongoing financial turmoil.
McCain and Obama began to unveil details of how they would approach the problem Friday, but they seemed to be giving the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve space to hammer out their rescue plan with Congress. (ANI)
Obama way ahead of McCain in Wall Street firms funding.
Is Michelle Obama twice as disliked as Cindy McCain?.
Former Hewlett-Packard CEO open to being McCain's VP.
McCain left red faced after economic adviser accuses Americans of 'whining'.
McCain doesn't e-mail or know how to use the Internet.



