| |
60-day
election
sprint
opens
with
weak
jobs
report
CHARLOTTE,
N.C. -
President
Barack
Obama
charges
onto the
campaign
trail
Friday
pleading
for
patience
from
hard-pressed
Americans
but
confronted
with the
harsh
reality
of a
bleak
new
report
on the
nation's
unemployment
outlook.
Republican
rival
Mitt
Romney,
ready
for the
two-month
sprint
to
Election
Day,
blasted
out
blasted
out 15
new TV
ads in
eight
states.
Obama
and
Romney
shadow
each
other
Friday:
Both of
them are
campaigning
in New
Hampshire
and
Iowa,
improbable
battleground
states
in the
too-close-to-call
race.
The
campaigning
was sure
to be
dominated
by a new
report
from the
Labor
Department
showing
that
U.S.
employers
added
just
96,000
jobs
last
month,
failing
to meet
expectations.
The
unemployment
rate
fell to
8.1
percent
from 8.3
percent
in July,
but only
because
more
people
gave up
looking
for
work.
On the
morning
after
Obama's
closing
speech
at the
Democratic
National
Convention,
top
campaign
adviser
Robert
Gibbs
was up
early to
pronounce
the
gathering
had
achieved
its
goals.
"The
entire
convention
showed
you
where
Barack
Obama
wants to
take
this
country,"
he said.
But
Gibbs
acknowledged
there's
a far
different
dynamic
to this
race
than the
excitement
and
novelty
that
were
associated
with
Obama's
historic
first
race for
the
White
House.
"This
isn't
2008, we
understand
that,"
Gibbs
said on
"CBS
This
Morning."
He added
that
Obama
knows
his
mission
of
strengthening
the
economy
is
"incomplete."
Romney
and the
Republicans
argue
that
three
years of
unemployment
above 8
percent
and
minimal
economic
growth
are
valid
reasons
to fire
Obama
after
one
term.
The
incumbent
contends
that,
having
inherited
one of
the
worst
economic
crises
in
history,
he needs
more
time to
turn the
nation
around.
"I won't
pretend
the path
I'm
offering
is quick
or easy.
I never
have,"
Obama
told
Democrats
at their
convention
Thursday
night.
"You
didn't
elect me
to tell
you what
you
wanted
to hear.
You
elected
me to
tell you
the
truth.
And the
truth
is, it
will
take
more
than a
few
years
for us
to solve
challenges
that
have
built up
over
decades."
Obama's
concession
that his
work is
incomplete
runs
smack
into a
harsh
reality:
No
president
since
the
Great
Depression
has been
re-elected
with
such
grim
economic
numbers.
For the
candidates,
the two
months
to Nov.
6
promise
a
high-stakes
mix of
debates,
multiple
appearances
in a
dozen
battleground
states
and
hours of
campaign
speeches.
Both
will be
scrapping
for the
precious
commodity
of
electoral
votes to
reach
the
winning
number
of 270,
leaving
no
competitive
state
quiet
this
fall.
The
airwaves
will be
inundated
with ads
from the
campaigns
and
outside
groups,
with
Romney
likely
to have
more
money to
spend.
The GOP
nominee
has new
ads
running
in
Colorado,
Florida,
Iowa,
Nevada,
New
Hampshire,
North
Carolina,
Ohio and
Virginia
-
mapping
out many
of the
key
battleground
states
where
the race
will
play
out. His
campaign
has
purchased
about
$4.5
million
in
television
advertising
for the
next
several
days,
according
to
officials
who
track
such
spending.
The
themes
of those
ads -
deficit,
home
values,
defense,
over-regulation,
manufacturing,
energy,
families
- offer
a
preview
of some
of the
issues
sure to
dominate
the
conversation
in
coming
weeks.
Obama
and Vice
President
Joe
Biden,
along
with
their
wives,
campaign
Friday
in New
Hampshire
- it
offers
four
electoral
votes -
and Iowa
- six
votes -
before
ending
the day
in
Florida,
the
highest-count
swing
state
with 29.
While
Romney
hits
Iowa and
New
Hampshire,
too, his
wife,
Ann,
presses
for
votes in
Virginia
- 13
electoral
votes -
and his
running
mate,
Rep.
Paul
Ryan,
focuses
on
Nevada -
six
votes.
The
battleground
list
includes
Colorado,
Ohio,
Pennsylvania
and
Wisconsin.
In his
prime-time
speech
Thursday
night,
Obama
cast the
election
as a
stark
choice
of
competing
visions
about
the
country
and the
role of
government.
He
described
a nation
where
the
government
bailed
out
desperate
automakers,
a move
Romney
opposed,
and
saved
thousands
of jobs.
Obama
contrasted
that
with a
Republican
approach
that he
argued
sees tax
cuts as
a
solution
to all
problems
and
focuses
on the
individual.
"Have a
surplus?
Try a
tax cut.
Deficit
too
high?
Try
another.
Feel a
cold
coming
on? Take
two tax
cuts,
roll
back
some
regulations
and call
us in
the
morning,"
Obama
said in
a
mocking
tone.
Patience
was the
watchword
at the
three-day
Democratic
convention
in
Charlotte
as
delegates
roared
through
Obama's
speech
and
frequently
chanted
"Four
more
years."
Romney
also
talked
about
patience
at the
Republican
gathering
in
Florida
last
week,
but he
said
America
had run
out of
it.
"Americans
have
supported
this
president
in good
faith.
... The
time has
come to
turn the
page,"
the GOP
nominee
said in
his
convention
speech.
As the
Democrats
wrapped
up their
three-day
gathering,
the
Romney
campaign
made
clear
the
election
would be
a
referendum
on the
president's
tenure.
"Americans
will
hold
President
Obama
accountable
for his
record -
they
know
they're
not
better
off and
that
it's
time to
change
direction,"
Matt
Rhoades,
the
challenger's
campaign
manager,
said in
a
statement.
Obama
mentioned
his
rival by
name
just
once,
but his
target
was
clear.
The
president
highlighted
the
national
security
successes
- the
death of
Osama
bin
Laden,
the
fight
against
al-Qaida
- that
have
earned
him high
marks in
opinion
polls, a
contrast
to the
low
grades
he
receives
on the
economy.
Romney,
he
pointed
out,
stumbled
during
his
overseas
trip,
angering
Britain
when he
suggested
its
Olympics
preparation
had
fallen
short.
"My
opponent
and his
running
mate are
new to
foreign
policy,
but from
all that
we've
seen and
heard,
they
want to
take us
back to
an era
of
blustering
and
blundering
that
cost
America
so
dearly,"
Obama
said.
"After
all, you
don't
call
Russia
our No.
1 enemy
- and
not
al-Qaida
- unless
you're
still
stuck in
a Cold
War time
warp.
You
might
not be
ready
for
diplomacy
with
Beijing
if you
can't
visit
the
Olympics
without
insulting
our
closest
ally."
In
opinion
polls,
Americans
insist
that the
economy
will be
the
overriding
issue
this
election.
Romney
wants to
extend
all tax
cuts
that are
due to
expire
on Dec.
31 with
an
additional
20
percent
reduction
in rates
across
the
board,
arguing
that it
will
spur job
growth.
He has
embraced
the main
tenets
of
running
mate
Ryan's
far-reaching
budget -
deep
cuts in
domestic
programs
such as
education,
repeal
of
Obama's
health
care law
and a
remaking
of the
Medicare
program
for
seniors
into a
voucher-system
for
those
now
under
55.
Obama
wants to
renew
the tax
cuts
except
on
incomes
higher
than
$250,000,
saying
that
millionaires
should
contribute
to an
overall
effort
to cut
federal
deficits.
He also
criticizes
the
spending
cuts
Romney
advocates,
saying
they
would
fall
unfairly
on the
poor,
lower-income
college
students
and
others.
He
argues
that
Republicans
would
"end
Medicare
as we
know it"
and
saddle
seniors
with
ever-rising |