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    Milenko Kindl pfjejwepfk

    NEW YORK - The economic crisis and raw politics threatened to derail
    the first presidential debate as John McCain challenged Barack Obama
    to delay Friday's event to work on the financial crisis. Obama
    rebuffed the plea, saying presidents need to "deal with more than one
    thing at once."
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    The White House rivals maneuvered Wednesday to claim the leadership
    role in resolving the economic turmoil that has overshadowed their
    campaign. Obama said he would continue preparing for the debate and
    consulting with bailout negotiators and Treasury Secretary Henry
    Paulson. McCain said he would stop all campaigning and return to
    Washington on Thursday to work toward a bipartisan solution.

    "This is exactly the time when the American people need to hear from
    the person who, in approximately 40 days, will be responsible for
    dealing with this mess," Obama said in Clearwater, Fla. "It's going to
    be part of the president's job to deal with more than one thing at
    once."

    But McCain said they must focus on a bipartisan solution as the Bush
    administration' s $700 billion bailout proposal seemed headed for
    defeat. If not, McCain said ominously that credit will dry up,
    jeopardizing home sales, individual savings and company payrolls.

    "I do not believe that the plan on the table will pass as it currently
    stands, and we are running out of time," McCain said.

    Both candidates accepted President Bush's invitation to attend a White
    House meeting Thursday afternoon with congressional leaders in hopes
    of agreeing on a rescue plan. McCain had spoken with Bush earlier
    Wednesday and requested such a meeting.

    In a joint statement Wednesday night, the candidates said the country
    faces "a moment of economic crisis" and they called for political
    unity to solve it because "the jobs, savings and the prosperity of the
    American people are at stake." Both said Bush's plan was "flawed."

    "We cannot risk an economic catastrophe," they said.

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., McCain's representative in debate
    negotiations, told The Associated Press that McCain will not attend
    the debate unless there is agreement on a solution that is publicly
    endorsed by Obama, McCain, the White House and congressional leaders.

    Asked whether the debate could go on, Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs
    said: "My sense is there's going to be a stage, a moderator, an
    audience and at least one presidential candidate."

    The jockeying between McCain and Obama began after the senators spoke
    privately Wednesday.

    McCain beat Obama to the punch with the first public statement. The
    surprise announcement was an attempt to outmaneuver Obama on an issue
    McCain trails on and as the Democrat gains in the polls. McCain went
    before TV cameras minutes after they spoke and before the campaigns
    could hammer out the agreed-upon joint statement.

    Obama, too, made a political calculation by rejecting McCain's
    challenge while still trying to appear on top of the problem. Obama
    repeatedly stressed that he called McCain first to propose a joint
    statement. He said McCain called back several hours later and agreed,
    but also said he wanted to postpone the debate and hold joint meetings
    in Washington. Obama said he suggested they first issue the statement.

    "When I got back to the hotel, he had gone on television to announce
    what he was going to do," Obama said.

    McCain said he would return to Washington on Thursday after an address
    to former President Clinton's Global Initiative session. He canceled a
    scheduled appearance on CBS' "The Late Show with David Letterman" and
    a meeting with India's prime minister.

    McCain called Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid and House Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi to propose that joint meetings with Obama and
    congressional leaders be held quickly, according to leadership aides.
    Reid spokesman Jim Manley said Reid responded by reading McCain his
    public statement, in which Reid said it would not be helpful for the
    candidates to come back and inject presidential politics into the
    negotiations.

    Reid later told reporters that McCain "is trying to divert attention
    from his failing campaign."

    Debate planners said they were continuing to prepare for the event at
    the University of Mississippi.

    McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, was canceling her limited campaign
    events. She told the "CBS Evening News" that the country could be
    headed for another Great Depression if Congress doesn't reach a
    solution.

    How long the suspension would last, McCain adviser Steve Schmidt would
    not say.

    McCain has struggled with how to handle the situation, which he might
    escape with modest political damage if he and Obama can reach some
    type of accord on the matter.

    Scores of congressional Republicans hinted this week that they may
    oppose the $700 billion proposal, and Reid pointedly suggested that
    Democrats could not be expected to back it if McCain did not publicly
    do so.

    That leaves McCain with two unpalatable choices. He can oppose a major
    Republican initiative the administration says is needed to prevent a
    full-blown recession, and risk blame if the prediction comes true. Or
    he can vote for an extraordinarily costly bailout, which many
    Americans seem to resent, just when polls show him falling farther
    behind Obama.

    Obama also risks voter wrath if he supports the bailout. But he could
    frame his stand as bipartisan statesmanship, whereas McCain's vote
    could be spun as another example of him siding with Bush, a major
    impediment to his campaign.

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