Politics | Election 2008 Campaigns Go All-Out in Ohio Obama leads, but both teams are playing hardball By Matt Cantor Posted Oct 31, 2008 10:16 AM CDT Copied Former President Bill Clinton speaks at a campaign rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., in Campbell, Ohio Thursday, Oct. 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Stahl) Barack Obama has led in the last 11 Ohio polls, but the battle for the all-important state is intensifying as Republicans make a last-minute get-out-the-vote sweep. Early voting has leaned Obama’s way, but Republicans—who don't see a clear path to the White House without victory here—say that means little. Salon and the Wall Street Journal look at the battle for Ohio. Republicans are launching an effort that exceeds the party’s massive 2004 voter-turnout operation, which gave Bush a slim victory. They’ve already made more voter calls than they did in that "gold standard” year, and they have an elaborate system targeting voters on issues that matter to them. A McCain pollster says the gap between the candidates in the state is closing, but a Democratic secretary of state—a Republican steered the election ship last time—could boost the Dems. Read These Next Cartoonist Scott Adams paralyzed amid a battle with cancer. 2 of Rob and Michele Reiner's kids speak out. Colleagues are heartbroken by murder of sports journalist. NASCAR is devastated by driver's death in plane crash. Report an error