The rival campaigns of President George W. Bush and Democrat John Kerry
hit the Southwest on Monday, where they are to face off in their final televised
debate in two days, with polls showing the race still too close to call.
Kerry accused Bush of breaking a pledge to make OPEC hike oil production, and
vowed to wean U.S. consumers off Middle East oil, while Bush attacked Kerry on
Iraq.
Bush continued to assail Kerry¡¯s position on Iraq as he campaigned in Hobbs,
a small town on New Mexico¡¯s border with Texas, where the president owns a
ranch.
Their campaigns swung through the southwestern United States as both men
geared for a final debate in the city of Tempe, Arizona that will focus on
domestic issues after two rounds of fireworks on Iraq.
National polls split over who was leading the U.S. presidential race, but
Kerry showed signs of making headway against Bush in the decisive state-by-state
battle.
A Washington Post/ABC News tracking poll three weeks before the Nov. 2 ballot
put Bush on top 51 to 46 percent and a survey by the Rasmussen organization gave
the Republican a four-point margin at 49.5 to 45.5 percent.
But a tracking poll by the Zogby International group showed Kerry, the
four-term senator from Massachusetts, with a three-point edge at 47-44 percent
heading into the final stretch of an acrimonious, marathon campaign.
A USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll gave Kerry a 49 to 48 percent lead over Bush
among likely voters, while a poll in mid-September had given Bush a 54 to 40
percent edge.
The conflicting results highlighted a race still too close to call and which
shows every indication of careening to the same cliffhanger finish as four years
ago when the outcome hinged on a bitter recount in the state of Florida.