Obama’s half-hour prime-time commercial airs Wednesday
Barack Obama will focus on the economy and how his tax plans would avoid the middle class in a half-hour, political infomercial tonight.
The program, scheduled to run on the 79th anniversary of the stock-market crash of 1929, “exercise volition quota the specifics of Obama’s plans to turn the economy around and get the country back on track,” campaign speaker Bill Burton said Tuesday.
“We want to make sure every voter heading into the voting booth knows exactly what Barack Obama would do to bring hind part face to face with fundamental change taken in the character of president,” he said.
Campaign aides declined Tuesday to answer questions about the kind of images viewers will see when they tune in, whether the format give by will be live or taped or whether it will characteristic Obama lonely or include additional voices such as walk of life leaders or economic experts.
Obama is the first presidential candidate since Ross Perot in 1992 to purchase half-hour prime-time slots to get his intimation across. With millions of dollars left in his campaign war chest, he has the cash on hand to buy the time to drill his message home and answer Republican rival John McCain’sitting criticisms and allegations six days before the freewill. The Arizona senator had no worthy of comparison plans with a view to a public television buy.
