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WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- US President George
W. Bush and Senator John Kerry will meet Wednesday night for their third
and final presidential debate, the last nationwide chance for them to reach out
to millions of undecided voters just 20 days before the election.
The stakes were high for both
candidates as polls after the twoprevious debates suggested the candidates were
in a dead heat in the race for the White House.
The 90-minute debate in Tempe, Arizona, is the only
one devotedto domestic issues such as jobs, health care and Social Security. The
Iraq war and terrorism, however, are also expected to be brought up since the
two issues have dominated the campaign.
Bush is expected to defend his tax cuts and his
performance on economy. He has touted on his campaign trails that his tax cuts
have benefited small business and added 1.9 million jobs in the last 13 months.
The Republican president would also focus on Kerry's
Senate record and label the Massachusetts senator a liberal who would turn
health care to government control and raise taxes to fund hisplans for domestic
programs.
"To pay for all the big spending programs he's
outlined during his campaign, he's going to have to raise your taxes," Bush told
supporters in Colorado Tuesday. "Raising taxes would be the wrong prescription
for economic growth."
Kerry has promised to raise taxes only on those
making more than 200,000 dollars a year and to give tax credit to middle
class.His campaign said the Bush camp has distorted Kerry's health care plan by
using misleading numbers.
The Democratic senator, who has closed up his
pre-debate gap with Bush, is expected to lash out at Bush over job losses,
risinggas prices and deteriorating budget deficits. Polls show Kerry hasan edge
on many of those domestic issues.
He is expected to highlight the fact that Bush is the
first president in more than 70 years who has seen net job losses on hiswatch.
The senator said in his first two debates that more than 1.6 million jobs have
lost during the four years of Bush's office.
The senator will fight against Bush's effort to label
him a "liberal" and is expected to repeat his promise not to raise taxes for
anyone who earns less than 200,000 dollars a year.
He will detail a health care plan which he says would
reduce the cost and still give the choice to the people, not the government.
In the hours before the debate, Bush won an expected
endorsement from the National Rifle Association, a powerful group lobbying
against any type of gun control. The association plans tospend about 20 million
dollars to campaing on behalf of Bush.
Kerry criticized Treasury Secretary John Snow's
comments that it was "a myth" that there had been economic failures on Bush's
watch, saying the comments was an "outrageous slap in the face to America's
middle class." The comments showed that the Bush camp was trying to "spin its
way out of the problems facing working America," he said. Enditem
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