To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (38891 ) 8/11/2008 3:16:00 PM From: longnshort Respond to of 224750 Centrist voters are tilting from Obama Fears of far left boost McCain Ralph Z. Hallow (Contact) Monday, August 11, 2008 Sen. Barack Obama is doing what Republicans once thought only a presidential candidacy by Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton could do - uniting the right and center. State Republican Party leaders interviewed by The Washington Times said fear of a far-left Obama presidency is warming once-skeptical voters to Sen. John McCain, fueling growing enthusiasm among Republicans that Mr. McCain's more aggressive campaigning can lead to victory. "It appears that the more that Obama speaks, the more afraid folks in South Carolina get," said Spartanburg County Republican Party Chairman Rick Beltram. "We are seeing 'die-hard' Democrats tell us that Obama is not their man. "We are expecting the white Democrats to be fleeing the Democratic ship when November 4 comes around - plus, the Democratic candidate [Bob Conley] that is running against Senator [Lindsey] Graham is also running away from the Democrats, and you can quote me on that," Mr. Beltram said. In union-dominated Michigan, a state targeted by both major parties, state Republican Party Chairman Saul Anuzis said he is seeing signs that independents and Reagan Democrats are moving toward Mr. McCain. "People who may have been apprehensive about McCain now see this race as potentially winnable," Mr. Anuzis said. The latest daily tracking poll by Gallup shows the presidential contest in a statistical dead heat, with the Illinois Democrat three percentage points ahead of the Arizona Republican, 46 percent to 43 percent. National tracking polls of likely voters by Rasmussen, Zogby and others show similar numbers. During the primaries, Mr. McCain had only 11 supporters on the 168-member Republican National Committee, many of whom never forgave the senator for his lead role in passing campaign finance regulations that they consider an attack on First Amendment rights, and his former opposition to offshore drilling and to President Bush's tax cuts. Democrats said the campaign still has far to go, that both candidates will have their ups and downs, and that many voters would not begin focusing in earnest on the presidential election until the conventions. "Truth be told, the campaign does not really begin in earnest until the conventions are done. You will have a lot of people focusing on the race after the Democratic convention and there will be much more interest [in Mr. Obama] generated among people who are watching it," said Democratic media strategist Bud Jackson.