honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, November 3, 2008

Focused on getting out the vote

 •  Hawaii Democrats plan parties hoping to celebrate Obama win
 •  Odds are 1 in 60M one vote can decide election

By Nedra Pickler and Liz Sidoti
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Associated Press photos

spacer spacer

GENERAL ELECTION

Tuesday

Polls open: 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. People in line at 6 p.m. will be allowed to vote.

You'll need: A photo ID with signature, such as a Hawai'i driver's license.

Non-peak hours: Elections officials say polling places are likely to be less busy from 9:30 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 4 p.m.

Polling place: Not sure if you're registered, or where your polling place is? Go to www.hawaii.gov/elections and click on "Polling Place Locator." Or go to www4.honolulu.gov/vote.

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
spacer spacer

ELECTION2008

Search our Voters' Guide to compare candidates, then read our coverage of local races and the debate over rail, a state constitutional convention and other charter amendments.

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Before the candidate arrived yesterday, Bruce Springsteen got a kiss from wife Patti Scialfa after performing at an Obama rally in Cleveland.

AMY SANCETTA | Associated Press

spacer spacer

HONOLULUADVERTISER.COM

Tomorrow, keep on top of the national and local races throughout the day and evening.

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Gretchen Wilson played her hit, "Redneck Woman," at a rally yesterday in Marietta, Ohio, for GOP vice presidential candidate Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

JEFF GENTNER | Associated Press

spacer spacer

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Barack Obama and John McCain uncorked massive get-out-the-vote operations in more than a dozen battleground states yesterday — millions of telephone calls, mailings and door-knockings in a frenzied, fitting climax to a record-shattering $1 billion campaign. Together, they'll spend about $8 per presidential vote.

With just two days to go, most national polls show Obama ahead of McCain. State surveys suggest the Democrat's path to the requisite 270 electoral votes — and perhaps far beyond — is much easier to navigate than McCain's.

Obama exuded confidence. "The last couple of days, I've been just feeling good," he told 80,000 gathered to hear him — and singer Bruce Springsteen — in Cleveland. "The crowds seem to grow, and everybody's got a smile on their face. You start thinking that maybe we might be able to win an election on November 4th."

In Peterborough, N.H., McCain held his final town hall-style event in the state that put him on the national map in 2000 and launched his GOP primary comeback eight years later. "I come to the people of New Hampshire to ask them to let me go on one more mission," said McCain, who is looking for an upset victory against Obama.

Polls show the six closest states are Florida, Indiana, Missouri, North Carolina, Nevada and Ohio. All were won by Bush and made competitive by Obama's record-shattering fundraising. The campaigns also are running aggressive ground games elsewhere, including Iowa, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Colorado and Virginia.

All that's left now for the candidates is to make sure people vote tomorrow — if they haven't already.

Indeed, Election Day is becoming a misnomer. About 27 million absentee and early votes were cast in 30 states as of Saturday night, more than ever. In Hawai'i, 69,655 voters cast early ballots. Democrats outnumbered Republicans in pre-Election Day voting in key states.

That has Democrats — and some Republicans — privately questioning whether McCain can overtake Obama, even if GOP loyalists turn out in droves tomorrow. Obama may already have too big of a head start in critical states like Nevada and Iowa, which Bush won four years ago.

LAST-MINUTE FLURRY

As the campaign closes, voters were being inundated with a crush of television ads and automated phone calls.

In a new TV ad, Obama highlighted Vice President Dick Cheney's support for McCain. The ad features Cheney, extremely unpopular among the public, at an event Saturday in Wyoming, saying, "I'm delighted to support John McCain."

Not to be outdone, the Republican National Committee rolled out phone calls that include Hillary Rodham Clinton's criticism of Obama during the Democratic primaries. She is heard saying: "In the White House, there is no time for speeches and on-the-job training. Sen. McCain will bring a lifetime of experience to the campaign, and Sen. Obama will bring a speech that he gave in 2002." A Clinton spokeswoman said she disapproves of the ad.

Another phone call to Pennsylvania and Ohio voters takes Obama's words about coal-burning technology out of context and claims he will "bankrupt the coal industry."

The Pennsylvania GOP also unveiled a TV ad featuring Obama's former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, declaring "God damn America!" in a sermon.

Obama and McCain campaigned on each other's turf yesterday. Obama was in Ohio, a bellwether state Bush won four years ago and where polls show Obama tied or winning. McCain visited Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, states won by Democrat John Kerry in 2004. He trails in both.

GOP BOOSTS SPENDING

McCain and the RNC dramatically ramped up their spending in the campaign's final days and now are matching Obama ad for ad, if not exceeding him, in key markets in states such as Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, Virginia and Pennsylvania.

After months of planning, the Republican Party launched the last stage of its vaunted "72-hour program," when volunteers descend on competitive states for the final stretch. Democrats unleashed their "persuasion army" of backers scouring their own backyards to encourage people to back Obama in the campaign's waning hours.

Obama's campaign reported that Saturday was its largest volunteer day. Said campaign spokesman Bill Burton, "Our volunteers are completely engaged."

McCain's crew says theirs are, too. "There's no doubt that we've got an uphill battle," said Rich Beeson, the RNC's political director. But "We still have a lot of voters that we can and will turn out."

The RNC reported 5.4 million voter contacts last week, compared with 1.9 million in the same week in 2004, and it says its volume has steadily increased since October began. Overall, it says, 26 million voters have been contacted over four months.

On Saturday alone, the RNC says an estimated 3 million voters were contacted by phone or in person, and it saw so many volunteers show up to help that in at least one state, Colorado, the party ran out of canvassing packets. Some 180,000 were gone by midday Saturday; more were printed.

McCain planned visits today to media markets that hit battlegrounds Florida, Virginia, Indiana, New Mexico, and Nevada. A repeat trip to Pennsylvania also was slated before McCain returns home to Arizona.

Obama planned visits to Florida, North Carolina and Virginia today and a stop in Indiana tomorrow morning.