Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama unveiled a group of high-profile Republicans on Tuesday who he hopes will help him win the support of Republican voters in swing states.
"I'm convinced that the national interest demands a new approach to our interaction with the world," said former Rep. Jim Leach of Iowa, one of the "Republicans for Obama." "This is simply not a time for politics as usual."
The group's strategy will focus on winning support for Obama in states that have tended to favor Republicans presidential candidates: North Carolina, Virginia, Iowa, Colorado, Ohio and Florida. The group -- which also includes Jim Whitaker, the Republican mayor of Fairbanks North Star Borough, Alaska -- will launch a website this week and plans campaign appearances on Obama's behalf.
'Old American values'
Leach, a former foreign service officer, predicted that many Republicans and independents would be attracted by Obama's campaign. (Obama and his supporters call his Republican supporters "Obamacans.")
He said his decision to endorse a Democratic candidate for the first time wasn't easy, but "the national interest comes before party concerns."
Leach said he thought that Obama would return the presidency to a less partisan style that was "rooted in very old American values."
However, Leach's decision could cause ripples with the group Common Cause, where he serves on the board and which has a policy against political endorsements. Leach said he wasn't aware of any such concerns.