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Obama warns seniors on Social Security
By MIKE GLOVER
Associated Press
May 19, 2008
GRESHAM, Ore. (AP) -- Hours before being greeted by the biggest crowd of his campaign, Democrat Barack Obama quietly told a small group of seniors Sunday that Republican John McCain would threaten the Social Security they depend on because he supports privatizing the program.
Fire officials estimated 65,000 packed into a riverside park for a spectacular afternoon rally at a sun-splashed scene on the banks of the Willamette River in Portland. They said an additional 15,000 were left outside and dozens of boaters could be seen floating in the river.
''Wow, wow, wow,'' Obama said as he surveyed the audience. ''We have had a lot of rallies. This is the most spectacular setting, the most spectacular crowd we have had this entire campaign.''
While more subdued, his apprearance early in the day before about 130 people at an assisted living facility to talk Social Security was a significant attempt to tie the GOP's presidential nominee-in-waiting to an unpopular President Bush on a pocket book issue that motivates seniors -- and also concerns younger generations worried about their own future retirement.
''Let me be clear, privatizing Social Security was a bad idea when George W. Bush proposed it, it's a bad idea today,'' Obama said. ''That's why I stood up against this plan in the Senate and that's why I won't stand for it as president.''
Bush proposed a Social Security plan in 2005 that focused on creating private accounts for younger workers, but it never came up for a vote in Congress. Democrats strongly opposed the idea and few Republicans embraced it.
Obama said McCain would push to raise the retirement age for collecting Social Security benefits or trim annual cost-of-living increases. Obama has rejected both ideas as solutions to the funding crisis projected for Social Security in favor of making higher-income workers pay more into the system.
''We have to protect Social Security for future generations without pushing the burden onto seniors who have earned the right to retire in dignity,'' he said.
McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds accused Obama of making ''misinformed partisan attacks.''
''John McCain has been clear about his belief that we must fix Social Security for future generations and keep our promises to today's retirees, but raising taxes should not be the answer to every problem,'' Bound said.
It was a day of coastal campaigning for the two Democrats still competing for the party's presidential nomination.
Obama was in Oregon, where he is favored to win the state's presidential primary on Tuesday. Hillary Rodham Clinton spent a second straight day in Kentucky, where she is favored to win when its voters head to the polls the same day.
She attended worship services at a Methodist church in Bowling Green, and happily sang hymns and joined in Bible readings. But her smile faded when the pastor launched into a sermon about adultery, asking his congregants whether the devil had ever whispered over their shoulders in their marriages.
>> Continued -- Page 1 2
Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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