McCain seeks solutions to housing crisis
By Tim Gaynor
SANTA ANA, California (Reuters) - Republican presidential candidate John McCain, looking to bolster his economic credentials, promised on Tuesday to find an answer to the U.S. housing crisis but came under fire from Democrats for failing to back a specific approach.
McCain, who has been criticized as weak on the economy, said he was open to a variety of solutions to ease problems in U.S. housing markets and called for quick meetings of mortgage lenders and accountants to begin to tackle the issue.
"I will not play election year politics with the housing crisis. I will evaluate everything in terms of whether it might be harmful or helpful to our effort to deal with the crisis we face now," the Arizona senator told business leaders in southern California.
"I will consider any and all proposals based on their cost and benefits. In this crisis, as in all I may face in the future, I will not allow dogma to override common sense," he said.
McCain has clinched the Republican nomination and will face the winner of the Democratic race between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in November's presidential election.
Democrats have pounced on past comments that he knows less about economics than about foreign policy and national security to paint him as a risky and out-of-touch choice for the White House at a time of U.S. economic uncertainty.
McCain received the same criticism from fellow Republicans before the won the battle for the party's nomination.
But McCain's speech did not win over Democrats, who attacked his failure to spell out a plan to tackle housing problems and compared his stance to that of President George W. Bush. Continued...
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