HUDSON, WIS. - John McCain brought his weeklong road show on the U.S. economy to western Wisconsin Friday, telling about 500 businesswomen "these are tough times for America" and that a McCain presidency would be best able to turn things around.
The presumptive Republican nominee has spent this week touring battleground states and making his case that lower taxes, budget cutting and energy innovation are the best prescription for righting the nation's faltering economy.
"All of us know the economy is hurting, more than 400,000 Americans have lost jobs since December," he said to the town hall-style gathering at a construction company warehouse.
"The cost of everything -- energy, food -- is rising," he added. "... I have a plan to grow the economy to get moving again."
He focused particularly on the need to hold the line on taxes and achieve energy independence.
"No economic issue is more important than achieving strategic energy independence," which he said can be done by expanding domestic drilling for oil and natural gas, reviving the nuclear power industry and promoting alternative energy technology.
McCain said Barack Obama, his anticipated Democratic opponent, opposes those things.
"For a guy whose official seal says 'Yes, we can,' his agenda has a lot of 'No, we can't,'" he said.