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Politics : The Next President 2008

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To: calgal who wrote (2003)12/24/2007 11:36:54 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) of 3215
 
Obama Says He'll Make Toys Safer
By MIKE GLOVER
Sunday, December 23, 2007
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As holiday shoppers hunted for safe toys Sunday, Democrat Barack Obama touted his plan for tighter regulation of Chinese-made playthings, millions of which have been recalled because of unsafe levels of lead.

Obama said he would test to find toys with lead-based paint and ban those with even trace amounts of the substance.


Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks to local residents during a campaign stop, Sunday, Dec. 23, 2007, at Nodaway Valley High School in Greenfield, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
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"Now don't get me wrong, as president I will work with China to keep harmful toys off our shelves," Obama said. "But I'll also immediately take steps to ensure that all toys are independently tested before they reach our shores and I'll significantly increase penalties on companies that break the rules."

"The more toys we import from China, the more risk to our children," said Obama, an Illinois senator. "As president I will act with urgency to protect our children from being harmed by unsafe toys."

Obama used a pre-Christmas swing through western Iowa to call for bolstering consumer protection efforts against toys from China; his campaign said up to 80 percent of the toys sold in America are made there. Background documents provided by the campaign said up to 400,000 children each year suffer some form of lead poisoning, underscoring the need for independent inspection of those toys.

After the appearances, he was headed home to Chicago and joked about power-shopping on Christmas Eve.

"I'm going to have to do all of mine tomorrow. It's going to be tough," Obama said.

Iowa voters launch the presidential nominating season with precinct caucuses on Jan. 3, and most polls show Obama, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina locked in a tight, yet fluid, race.

When Obama asked for the undecideds in the audience of about 200 to show their hands, roughly one-third did.

Besides the promise of improved toy safety, the Democratic presidential candidate also argued for trade policies that are tougher and with more environmental standards and protections for workers.

Still, Obama sought distinctions with rivals Clinton and Edwards, though he softened the edges a bit. On Saturday, Obama criticized Edwards, saying he didn't have the record to back up the populist rhetoric he uses on the campaign trail.

Obama also said Edwards allowed an independent group to launch a $750,000 ad campaign for him in Iowa while decrying such practices on the stump. continued...

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