Obama and Clinton clash on gas tax before big votes
By Jeff Mason
GREENVILLE, North Carolina (Reuters) - Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton renewed their battle over gas tax relief on Monday in a late push for support on the eve of critical presidential showdowns in North Carolina and Indiana.
The candidates, embroiled in a grueling nominating struggle that has split the party, wooed working-class voters and launched new television advertisements attacking each other ahead of Tuesday's votes.
Clinton hit Obama for opposing her proposal to lift the federal gasoline tax for the summer, which he says is political pandering. She launched a television ad in both states accusing Obama of attacking her plan "because he doesn't have one."
Clinton says her support for a summer-long suspension of the gasoline tax would help Americans struggling with record gas prices in a faltering economy.
"Sen. Obama doesn't want to do anything," Clinton, a New York senator, told a rally at a community college in Greenville, North Carolina. "You don't hire a president to make speeches. You hire a president to solve problems."
Obama, an Illinois senator, responded with his own advertisement saying Clinton offered "more of the same old negative politics." He said the gas tax holiday was a dishonest approach to a real problem.
"There is not a single economist or editorial that I've read that says that this is a good idea, and the reason is, is because it's not being honest with the American people," Obama said on NBC's "Today" show. "People don't need symbolic relief, they need real relief."
Indiana and North Carolina, with a combined 187 delegates to the August nominating convention at stake, are the biggest prizes remaining in the state-by-state Democratic race. There will then be only six contests left. Continued...






