Candidates Urge Voter Turnout in Iowa
By LIZ SIDOTI
Associated Press
January 2, 2008
Page 2 of 3
With two days left in the campaign, Romney continued his ads against Huckabee. He also assailed Huckabee's defense of his own failure to read the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran last month.
''President Bush didn't read it for four years; I don't know why I should read it in four hours,'' Huckabee said in an interview published Monday in the Mason City Globe Gazette.
Romney seized on the comment: ''I'm not sure whether Governor Huckabee meant the attack as a joke, but this is not a time to be mocking our president, and it was I think in bad taste.''
A multimillionaire, Romney also indicated that he had funneled more of his personal fortune into his campaign, but wouldn't say how much. He had contributed $17 million through September.
For the most part, candidates spent New Year's Day trying to energize supporters.
In the Des Moines area, Romney combined football and politics at a series of ''House Party Huddles.'' At one, children ran around bashing one another with large, red foam mitts that read ''Mitt '08.''
At an Elks Lodge in Cedar Rapids, Huckabee pulled out a bass guitar and played ''Blue Suede Shoes'' and ''Mustang Sally'' with a singer and drummer, a warm-up perhaps for his appearance Wednesday with Jay Leno on NBC's ''Tonight Show.''
Obama's family was enthusiastic, buoyed by a Des Moines Register poll that showed him in the lead. His wife, Michelle, talked about ''when Barack is the next president of the United States'' and he referred to her ''the next first lady of the United States.''
''We stand on the brink of doing something very, very special here in Iowa,'' Obama said.
His chief rival, Clinton, campaigned with her 88-year old mother, Dorothy Rodham, and daughter, Chelsea, in tow as she worked to solidify her already strong support among female voters. Her husband, former President Clinton, campaigned separately, joking at one event that he was missing out on a day of football games and was being ''the quintessential indolent American male on New Year's Day.''
His faux grumbling aside, Clinton's campaign seized on a CNN poll that had her in the lead as aides picked apart the methodology of the Register survey.
''I don't know about you but I am feeling great!'' she said at her first event in Ames. Working hard to grab the momentum, Clinton joked about the extremes to which she would go to win support, recalling a campaign appearance among farmers and ranchers in an arena that normally is the site of cattle auctions.
''If you want to look inside my mouth to figure out whether you want to vote for me, that's fine, too,'' Clinton quipped. ''Whatever it takes.''
Edwards also brought his wife and two young children along for the final push, a ''marathon for the middle class'' during which he will continue to hammer away at pocketbook issues on an overnight drive to energize backers and deliver them to the caucuses.
>> Continued -- Page 1 2 3
Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
|