FRONT PAGE
CONTENTS
ARCHIVES
FAVORITES
GET PASSWORD

Copyrighted material

WHAT OBAMA, McCAIN, AREN'T TALKING ABOUT

by Earl Ofari Hutchinson

READ
Neither McCain or Obama Take Stand on Disasterous Latin Drug Programs

(PNS) -- Okay, we now know for the umpteenth time that Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain will cut taxes, provide affordable health care to everyone, drill for more oil, expand nuclear power use, end global warming, rein in the Wall Street fast buck artists, take out Osama Bin Laden, and end the war in Iraq either by withdrawal or victory. And yes we know that both have had a tough family upbringing, and therefore they know what working people have to go through.

These themes have been rehashed and reworked so many times that we can recite them in our sleep. But what we don't know and certainly haven't heard in the debates is what Obama and McCain will do about failing urban public schools, the HIV-AIDS pandemic, their view of the death penalty, the drug crisis, how they'll combat hate crimes, shore up crumbling and deteriorating urban transportation systems, and what type of judges they will appoint to the federal judiciary and to the Supreme Court.

The latter is especially crucial since there may be two, possibly three, high court vacancies during the first McCain or Obama White House term. We don't know what they'll do about these problems because the debate format, the questions and questioners, and even the Internet queries played it close, predictable and safe. The result is that the only thing the 50 to 60 million viewers who have tuned into the two debates know about these equally vital public policy concerns can only be gleaned from canned snippets from their speeches on the campaign trail, or more likely by going to their campaign Web sites. For most, that's not going to happen.


Even on the issues of health care, Iraq, and Iran that the debates have focused on, the responses from Obama and McCain has been a disappointment: Neither has gone past the canned lines that they have endlessly recited.

There were at least two or three moments during the debate when both contenders seemed poised to take their gloves off, and directly challenge each other on their votes and positions on taxes, health care, Iraq, and Iran: McCain demanded that Obama come clean and tell what the penalties would be on small businesses with his health care plan. Obama charged that McCain voted against the Children's Health Act. McCain implored Obama to admit that the surge in Iraq had worked, and wanted to know why he still wouldn't admit it. Obama claimed that McCain voted multiple times against alternative energy funding.

These were missed opportunities for the voters to really get the measure of each one beyond the stock pitches. In the three week countdown to Election Day, Nov. 4, my suspicion is that voters will still be in a fog regarding Obama and McCain's stance on the "other" issues that have gotten only the barest of shrift.



Comments? Send a letter to the editor.

Albion Monitor   October 8, 2008   (http://www.albionmonitor.com)

All Rights Reserved.

Contact rights@monitor.net for permission to use in any format.