Iowans hear final pleas for support

DES MOINES, Iowa — Uplifting appeals largely replaced stinging insults Tuesday as Democratic and Republican candidates did the only thing left to do in Iowa races that are too close to call — encourage supporters to vote for them.

“The polls look good, but understand this — the polls are not enough. The only thing that counts is whether or not you show up to caucus,” Democrat Barack Obama told a fired-up crowd of young and old packed into a high school gymnasium.

Amid murmurs of “Amen!” at a pizza parlor in Sergeant Bluff, Republican Mike Huckabee urged hundreds: “Don’t go alone. Take people with you. Fill up your car. Rent a van. Hijack your church’s bus, whatever you’ve got to do to get people to the caucus who are going to vote for me.”

Candidates made the pitch repeatedly as they canvassed the state for Thursday’s caucuses, the first votes of the presidential nominating process. At least 130,000 Democrats and 80,000 Republicans are expected to participate in 1,781 neighborhood meetings at schools, fire stations and community centers across Iowa on what is forecast to be a clear but cold night.

New polls show both races competitive, the outcomes extraordinarily unpredictable.

Among Democrats, Obama, an Illinois senator, is fighting with Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York for the lead as former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina gives them strong chase. Two former governors, Huckabee of Arkansas and Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, are vying for first on the Republican side.

Given the tightness, turning out voters will be critical.

Thus, hoards of volunteers made thousands of get-out-the-vote phone calls Tuesday, the campaigns rolled out uplifting television ads and the candidates made their pitches on the first day of 2008. The efforts were intended to maximize media exposure and voter outreach.

All but one candidate, Romney, shunned the negativity that spiked in recent weeks.

Obama, Clinton and Edwards played nice. Huckabee made good on a promise to clean up his act, the day after he held a news conference to say he wouldn’t run a critical ad against Romney — but then showed it to a room full of reporters and cameramen.

“It does remind you a bit of a person who stands up and says ‘I’m not going to call my opponent any names, but here are the names I’d call him if I were going to call him names,”’ Romney said in Johnston.

For the most part, candidates spent New Year’s Day trying to energize supporters.

In the Des Moines area, Romney combined football and politics at a series of “House Party Huddles.” At one, children ran around bashing one another with large, red foam mitts that read “Mitt ‘08.”

At an Elks Lodge in Cedar Rapids, Huckabee pulled out a bass guitar and played “Blue Suede Shoes” and “Mustang Sally” with a singer and drummer, a warm-up perhaps for his appearance Wednesday with Jay Leno on NBC’s “Tonight Show.”

Obama’s family was enthusiastic, buoyed by a Des Moines Register poll that showed him in the lead. His wife, Michelle, talked about “when Barack is the next president of the United States” and he referred to her “the next first lady of the United States.”

Dozens of hands shot up in the air when Obama asked for a show of undecideds in the crowd of hundreds. “We’ve still got some live ones in here,” he said.

His chief rival, Clinton, campaigned with her 88-year-old mother, Dorothy Rodham, and daughter, Chelsea, in tow as she worked to solidify her already strong support among female voters. Her husband, former President Clinton, campaigned separately, joking at one event that he was missing out on a day of football games and was being “the quintessential indolent American male on New Year’s Day.”

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