By Michael Sluss
LEBANON, Va.
His Republican critics insist that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama can’t possibly connect with the voters of rural Southwest Virginia, even if he can be competitive in the rest of this emerging battleground state.
But don’t tell that to the 2,400 people who packed a steamy high school gymnasium in Russell County Tuesday and rattled the rafters cheering for the Illinois senator.
Obama stirred his audience at Lebanon High School with a message aimed at voter concerns about the economy, job losses and energy prices. He drew sharp distinctions between himself and Republican nominee John McCain, portraying McCain as indifferent to the economic pressures confronting working families.
Obama, who has staked his campaign on a message of change, repeatedly criticized McCain for promising change after supporting much of President Bush’s legislative agenda in the U.S. Senate.
"You can put lipstick on a pig; it’s still a pig," Obama said, triggering a loud ovation. "You can wrap an old fish in a piece of paper called change; it’s still going to stink. After eight years, we’ve had enough of the same old thing."
The rhetoric between the two presidential campaigns has sharpened since the two parties staged their national conventions, and Virginia seems likely to hear plenty of it. McCain and his running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, will campaign today in Fairfax.
Obama’s visit to Lebanon was his second trip to far Southwest Virginia since the end of the primary season. The man who could become the country’s first black president used economic issues and personal stories to make connections with his largely white audience.
Obama said his economic and tax policies would favor working, middle class families, rebutting McCain’s claims that he will push to raise taxes. Obama insisted he will cut taxes for 95 percent of American families.
"If you’re like an ordinary person, making 30, 40 or 50 thousand dollars, then you realize how tough things are," Obama said. "And that’s why I’m running for president, because that’s where I come from."
Obama’s outreach to Southwest Virginia voters has drawn criticism from McCain backers. Former state Attorney General Jerry Kilgore, a native of Scott County said Monday that Obama is "wrong and out of touch" on a range of issues important to the region, citing the Democrat’s criticism of the coal industry and his much-publicized comments about why rural Americans feel strongly about guns and religion.
"His elitism prevents him from relating to small-town America," said Kilgore, a state co-chairman of McCain’s campaign. "When he makes statements like we cling to our faith and our guns, what message does that send to rural America and rural Virginia?"
Obama took on the gun issue without being asked about it, insisting that he poses no threat to law-abiding gun-owners.
"I will not take your shotgun away," Obama said. "I will not take your rifle away. I will not take your handgun away."
"If you want to find an excuse not to vote for me, don’t use that one, because it just ain’t true," Obama said.
Kenneth Patrick of Lebanon, a retired mine worker and hunter, said Obama’s comments on guns hit the right note.
"The Republicans stress that every campaign," Patrick said. "I thought that’s the best answer he could have given."
U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Abingdon, touted Obama as a "friend" of the coal industry that is vital to the region’s economy, noting that Obama has supported greater investments in so-called "clean coal" technology and efforts to create liquid fuel from coal.
Obama also got full-throated backing from Cecil Roberts, the president of the United Mine Workers of America, who fired up the crowd before Obama’s arrival with unsparing criticism of Bush and McCain.
"I hope you’re fed up!" Roberts thundered. "The Republicans have had their chance and they have blown it!"
And if Obama lacked mountain credibility, he got some help from bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley, who took the stage about an hour before Obama’s arrival to show his support for the Democrat.
"The reason I’m here is to do whatever I can to help Senator Obama be the next president of the United States," Stanley said, drawing boisterous applause. "I believe that Senator Obama would be the best man to get this country back in shape."
Obama’s visit brought national attention to Lebanon, the second time in recent weeks that a prominent politician called attention to the little town. Former Gov. Mark Warner, now a candidate for the U.S. Senate, mentioned Lebanon during his keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention last month, recalling how his administration lured CGI-AMS Inc. to Russell County and created 300 high-tech jobs. Obama met with executives from the company Tuesday before his rally.
"We’ve been really excited," said Jodi Helbert of Honaker, who brought her 18-year-old daughter to the Obama event. "My daughter was like, ‘This is so inspiring.’"
mike.sluss@roanoke.com, (804) 697-1585







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Fellow P.O.W. says he won't vote for John McCain
Know any military or vets who still think John McCain would be the better President? Here's a link to a detailed and very revealing essay about McCain -- from Dr. Phillip Butler, a decorated fighter-pilot who knew McCain at the U.S. Naval Academy and also in Vietnam as a fellow P.O.W!
"WHY I WILL NOT VOTE FOR JOHN McCAIN"
http://www.military.com/opinion/0,15202,164859_1,00.html.dk
(pass it on....)
McCain comes off as an arrogant hothead, excusable for a fighter-pilot, but terrifying to imagine as Commander-in-Chief! And he may have gotten into (and just barely graduated) the Naval Academy because his father and grandfather were USN Admirals. Butler says "....having been a POW is no special qualification for being President of the United States. The two jobs are not the same, and POW experience is not, in my opinion, something I would look for in a presidential candidate."
John McCain
said he has voted with President Bush over 90% of the time. How is that not walking lockstep? Before you say Obama has voted with the Democrats; guess what? That is a change from Bush. McCain served his country, honorably. That's a given. Yet his ideas are old & tired & proved, over the last 8yrs, to be wrong, for the USA of today.
Obama is all talk
Obama says the same nothing over and over and over. Can he finish the sentence..."I have proven that my ideas can work by XYZ because in the past I made it happen by XYZ..." No experience truly leading. No ideals truly put to the test. He is fooling people who are longing for true change in their lives. What they will eventually realize...and hopefully before it's too late...is that it is impossible for government to truly change your life FOR THE BETTER. You must do it yourself. The government needs to put the power in the people's hands. McCain is well aware of what it takes to lead this nation. He does not follow lockstep along party lines and has stirred Washington for many years. He is a true LEADER. He has proven himself as worthy. His love for this country and ALL its people is undeniable.
Jerry Kilgore?
Jerry Kilgore is a political has been, at best. Do his comments actually carry weight with anyone? I guess George Allen or Jim Gilmore were unavailable for comment. Now the republicans are howling over Obama's lipstick comment. It's an old (like McCain) expression, get over it. McCain needs to stop crying sexism and stop hiding behind the skirts of his v.p.
But...
But your change will sure leave your pocket with Obama.