McCain outlines economic stimulus plan

Thu Jan 17, 2008 3:54pm EST
 
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By Steve Holland

COLUMBIA, South Carolina (Reuters) - Republican presidential candidate John McCain shifted his campaign emphasis in South Carolina on Thursday to the ailing U.S. economy and proposed a long-term economic stimulus plan to fight "tough times ahead."

Two days before South Carolina votes in a crucial Republican contest to choose the party's presidential candidate in the November election, McCain told supporters in Columbia and Aiken that the U.S. economy is in some difficulty now.

"The fact is we have some tough times ahead," McCain told supporters in Columbia. But he said the U.S. economy will rebound. "We will get through this rough patch," he said.

His shift to a greater focus on ways to help the economy came as rival Mitt Romney, a former governor of Massachusetts, hammered McCain on the same economic themes in South Carolina that helped him defeat the Arizona senator in Michigan on Tuesday.

McCain holds a steady 7-point lead over rival Mike Huckabee in South Carolina ahead of Saturday's vote, according to a Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby poll.

South Carolina's Republican primary is the next battleground as both parties choose candidates to succeed President George W. Bush. Nevada also holds Republican and Democratic nominating contests on Saturday.

Romney had accused McCain of giving up on jobs lost in Michigan's faltering auto industry after McCain said some jobs there would not be coming back and it was important to retrain displaced workers for new high-tech jobs.

"I know there is a defeatist, pessimist attitude that says, 'Hey, those jobs are gone, they're gone forever,'" Romney said at a Staples Store in Columbia. "Well, I'm not going to sign up for that. I'm going to always be optimistic. I'm going to fight for every job."  Continued...

 
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