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McCain, Obama stake claims in Butler County | Butler County News and Issues
 

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McCain, Obama stake claims in Butler County

Both U.S. presidential campaigns are setting the pieces in place for a battle in Butler County.

Republican Sen. John McCain and Democratic Sen. Barack Obama have dispatched lieutenants to base regional headquarters in and around Hamilton.

The state Republican party has set up a two-person “Victory Center” at the Butler County GOP headquarters. This is only one of nine such offices in Ohio set up to back their party’s candidates on all levels.

The Obama camp has set up its own three-person “Campaign for Change” office at the Democratic party headquarters. They will set up phone banks, register voters and hand out signs in Butler, Warren, Preble and Clinton counties.

The Victory Center’s hope: to engineer a presidential victory on par with President George Bush’s 2004 landslide. Then, Bush walked away with 66 percent of the local vote. Many credit this margin of victory with giving Bush the state, and in turn, the election.

“We need the same type of turnout this year,” said Ohio GOP Spokesman John McClelland. “Butler County and all of southwest Ohio is critical for Republicans because that’s really where a lot of our base lives.”

As the election nears, paid staffers at the Democratic office are expected to double here.

They hope to seize on McCain’s perceived weaknesses with the Republican base and the fact that the March primaries left Butler County with more registered Democrats than Republicans, though many call that edge a statistical anomaly stemming from a hyped-up Democratic primary.

“We are not conceding any vote,” said Obama Campaign Spokesman Isaac Baker. “We are going to be actively campaigning in areas that have traditionally been Republican strongholds.”

“(Obama) lost 83 counties in Ohio in the Democratic primary because voters in the state felt lacked the experience and leadership necessary,” said McCain Spokesman Paul Lindsey. “The result will be no different in November.”

Baker packaged McCain as campaigning for Bush’s third term. “Once they know more about him (Obama) and get to know him, they’re going to support him,” he said.

And the spin begins.

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