SNEAK PEEK: GOP Candidates Turn Focus on Clinton, Obama and Iraq

Political jabs were flying across party lines as the race to 2008 heats up

ByABC News
January 8, 2009, 1:47 AM

September 12, 2007— -- No, Rip Van Winkle, you didn't fall asleep and miss the primary season, but it certainly felt like that today as we saw the Republican front-runners turn their attention to their Democratic counterparts.

Rudy Giuliani blasted Hillary Clinton in a radio interview and media availability today, accusing her of spewing "political venom" in the Iraq war debate. He later went after Barack Obama, questioning his call for a timetable for troop withdrawal in Iraq, and asked "When in the history of war has an army ever been asked to give the timetable of retreat? Makes no sense," ABC News' Sunlen Miller reports.

In Texas, Mitt Romney said his first thought when he heard of Obama's call for redeployment of troops from Iraq was "Thank heavens Barack Obama wasn't president," ABC News' Matt Stuart reports. Romney went on to say that had Obama, D-Ill., been president, he would have pulled troops out of Iraq, and given Osama Bin Laden a safe haven.

Why this shift from the usual inter-party back and forth to a more general election attack mode?

Perhaps the Romney and Giuliani (and eventually the second-tier Republican) campaigns are sensing that the star power on the Democratic side may take away some of the media attention from their contest.

The Democratic candidates can use President Bush as a consistent punching bag for the policy in Iraq and other key issues and score themselves big headlines and steady media coverage. (They also have their hands so full with each other they don't necessarily need to start focusing their attention across the aisle.)

An attack on Clinton or Obama may just do the same for the top-tier Republicans - one click on the Drudge Report today shows that it is certainly worth a shot.

The Republican schedule…Romney attends a luncheon fundraiser at 12:40 am ET in Woodlands, TX in the "Nautilus Room" at the Woodlands Resort and Conference Center. He then attends a fundraiser in Houston, TX at 6:30 pm ET.

Giuliani is in Atlanta, GA visiting with local residents at 11:30 am ET.