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Tales from the Trail

Tracking the 2008 U.S. campaign

June 13th, 2008

McCain, Obama on pocketbook issues — their own

Posted by: Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON - If the way someone runs their household accounts is any indication of how they would run the federal government’s, voters might want to look at rtx6ung.jpgthe financial disclosure statements released Friday by White House contenders John McCain and Barack Obama.

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee McCain has earned a reputation in the U.S. Congress as a conservative fiscal watchdog.

Yet he and his wife, Cindy, racked up at least $210,000 in credit card debt last year, according to his Senate financial disclosure form.

While the McCains are multimillionaires, the form showed that in 2007 they had a joint credit card with between $10,001 and $15,000 in debt.

Cindy McCain also had two cards solely in her name, each with a debt of $100,001 to $250,000.

rtx6ugy.jpgMcCain’s Democratic opponent, Obama, and his wife, Michelle, reported no liabilities. Obama also reported earnings from book royalties totaling more than $4 million.

The couple’s assets, including retirement funds, college savings accounts for their two daughters and other assets, were valued in the range of about $1.9 million to $7.2 million.

The financial activity for both candidates was in addition to their annual Senate salaries of $169,300.

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage. 

Photo credits: Top: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton (McCain speaks in New York June 12)Bottom: Reuters/Allen Fredrickson (Obama answers questions in Wisconsin June 12)

April 11th, 2008

Obama returns a compliment to Colin Powell

Posted by: Caren Bohan

INDIANAPOLIS - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on Friday returned a compliment to Colin Powell after the former Bush administration secretary of state told an interviewer that he was impressed with Obama.

Obama, a first-term Illinois senator, has been criticized by Democratic rival Hillary Clinton and Republican Sen. John McCain, as lacking experience on foreign policy.

Powell told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that Obama seemed to be a quick study. 

“Sen. Obama, he didn’t have a lot of experience in running a presidential campaign, did he, but he seems to know how to organize a task and he seems to knobama1.jpgow how to apply resources to a problem at hand,” Powell said.

“So that gives you some indication that (despite) his inexperience in foreign affairs and domestic affairs, he may be somebody who can learn quickly.”

Asked about Powell’s comments, Obama described Powell as “an outstanding public servant.” 

“He’s somebody who I’ve known for some time and I have extraordinary respect for him,” the Illinois senator told reporters … So I appreciate the kind words.” 

Powell, who served as secretary of state in Bush’s first term, helped Bush to build a case with the United Nations for the Iraq war. 
 

But in “Plan of Attack,” a book by journalist Bob Woodward that gives an account of the behind-the-scenes debate within the administration about the war, Powell is described as having privately counseled Bush not to go to war because of concerns about the chaos that might ensue after an invasion. 

Even though he has served in Republican administrations, Powell is not automatically throwing his support to presumptive Republican nominee John McCain. 

“I’m looking at all three candidates, I know them all very, very well, I consider myself a friend of each and every one of them, and I have not decided who I will vote for yet,” he told ABC.

Asked how frequently he speaks to Powell, Obama said: “We’re not speaking on a regular basis but we speak occasionally and every time that we do I find it very useful because he’s somebody who I think has good judgment, loves his country and is somebody whose counsel I actively seek.”

Click here for more Reuters 2008 campaign coverage

Photo credit: REUTERS//Frank Polich  (Obama speaks during a campaign stop in Gary, Indiana)