| |
More
assertive
Obama
lands
punches
on
Romney
in the
fight of
their
lives
By NANCY
BENAC
and
JULIE
PACE
Associated
Press
HEMPSTEAD,
N.Y. -
Two
alphas
in the
fight of
their
lives,
President
Barack
Obama
and
Republican
Mitt
Romney
sparred
with
passion
and grit
in a
debate
that
previewed
the
closing
arguments
of a
campaign
that
keeps
circling
back to
bedrock
questions
about
which
candidate
can do
more to
strengthen
the
fragile
economy.
Fresh
off
their
latest
encounter
and with
just
three
weeks
left in
the
race,
the
candidates
fan out
in all
directions
Wednesday
to pitch
their
tuned-up
messages
directly
to
voters
on some
of the
campaign's
most
treasured
turf:
Romney
in
Virginia,
Obama in
Iowa.
Vice
President
Joe
Biden is
westward
bound
for
Colorado
and
Nevada;
GOP
running
mate
Paul
Ryan
returns
to
all-important
Ohio.
It was a
re-energized
Obama
who
showed
up for
Tuesday's
town
hall-style
debate
at
Hofstra
University,
lifting
the
spirits
of
Democrats
who felt
let down
by the
president's
limp
performance
in the
candidates'
first
encounter
two
weeks
ago.
But
Romney
knew
what was
coming
and
didn't
give an
inch,
pressing
his case
even
when the
arguments
deteriorated
into
did-not,
did-too
rejoinders
that
couldn't
have
done
much to
clarify
the
choice
for
undecided
voters.
Tuesday's
debate
was the
third
installment
in what
amounts
to a
four-week-long
reality
TV
series
for
Campaign
2012.
Romney
was the
clear
victor
in the
series
debut,
Biden
aggressively
counterpunched
in the
next-up
vice
presidential
debate,
and the
latest
faceoff
featured
two
competitors
determined
to give
no
quarter.
It was a
pushy,
interruption-filled
encounter
filled
with
charges
and
countercharges
that the
other
guy
wasn't
telling
the
truth.
The
season
closer
is
coming
up
quickly:
a
foreign
policy
faceoff
Monday
at Lynn
University
in Boca
Raton,
Fla.
Romney,
brimming
with
confidence,
distilled
the
essence
of his
campaign
message
early in
Tuesday's
90-minute
debate
and
repeated
it
often.
"I know
what it
takes to
get this
economy
going,"
he said
over and
over.
And
this:
"We can
do
better."
And
this:
"We
don't
have to
settle
for what
we're
going
through."
Obama,
with
both the
benefit
and the
burden
of a
record
to run
on, had
a more
nuanced
message.
"The
commitments
I've
made,
I've
kept,"
he said.
"And
those
that I
haven't
been
able to
keep,
it's not
for lack
of
trying
and
we're
going to
get it
done in
a second
term."
Obama
also was
relentless
in
dismissing
the
merits
of
Romney's
policies
and
rejecting
his
characterizations
of the
president's
record.
"Governor
Romney
doesn't
have a
five-point
plan,"
the
president
argued.
"He has
a
one-point
plan.
And that
plan is
to make
sure
that
folks at
the top
play by
a
different
set of
rules."
The
candidates
were in
each
other's
faces -
sometimes
literally
- before
an
audience
of 82
uncommitted
voters
from New
York.
It's a
state
that's
already
a sure
bet for
Obama,
but the
voters
there
stood as
proxy
for
millions
of
Americans
across
the
nation
still
settling
on a
candidate.
"They
spent a
lot of
time
cutting
down the
other
person,"
said
22-year-old
Joe
Blizzard,
who
watched
with a
crowd of
500
students
at the
University
of
Cincinnati.
"As
someone
who is
undecided,
it was a
little
disappointing."
Fellow
student
Karim
Aladmi,
21, was
more
forgiving.
"It goes
without
saying
that the
knives
were
out," he
said. "I
thought
Obama
had a
strong
performance,
but
Romney
made him
work for
it. I
was
actually
impressed
by both
sides."
With
just 20
days
left
until
the
election,
polls
show an
extremely
tight
race
nationally.
Obama
appears
to have
237 of
the 270
electoral
votes
needed
for
victory
comfortably
in hand,
and
Romney
is
confident
of 191.
That
leaves
110
electoral
votes up
for
grabs in
nine
battleground
states:
Florida
(29),
Ohio
(18),
North
Carolina
(15),
Virginia
(13),
Wisconsin
(10),
Colorado
(9),
Iowa
(6),
Nevada
(6) and
New
Hampshire
(4).
While
Republicans
have
made
clear
gains in
recent
days,
the
president
leads in
several
polls of
Wisconsin
and
Ohio. No
Republican
has won
the
White
House
without
winning
Ohio.
Obama's
high
command
scored
the
latest
debate
as a win
for
their
guy -
but
allowed
that the
race
remains
tight as
ever.
"Our
view is
this is
going to
be a
close
race,"
said
senior
adviser
David
Plouffe.
"We
thought
that
before
the last
debate,
we think
that
now. ...
We got
53
percent
of the
vote
last
time,
we're
not
going to
get that
again."
Ryan
spoke
for the
Republicans
in a
fundraising
appeal
issued
not long
after
the
debate
ended.
"Mitt
crushed
it again
at
tonight's
debate,"
he
declared,
then
asked
for more
money to
help
"make
Mitt
Romney
the next
president."
In the
sprint
to
Election
Day,
every
aspect
of the
campaign
seems to
be
taking
on a
fresh
sense of
urgency
- the
ads, the
fundraising,
the
grass-roots
mobilizing,
the
outreach
to key
voting
blocs,
particularly
women.
Both
sides
are
pouring
millions
upon
millions
into TV
ads in
the
battleground
states,
and
independent
groups
are
adding
buckets
more.
Ann
Romney,
son Tagg
Romney
and
Romney
campaign
manager
Matt
Rhoades
each
emailed
supporters
with
pre-debate
appeals
for
contributions
Tuesday,
and
Michelle
Obama
and
former
President
Bill
Clinton
did
likewise
for
Obama.
The
president
himself
quickly
issued a
post-debate
plea to
"stand
by me"
and chip
in to
give him
the edge
in the
"neck
and
neck"
race.
A
Republican-leaning
independent
group
supporting
Romney
launched
a new
$11.1
million
ad push
aimed at
women,
with the
ads set
to run
for a
week in
most of
the
battleground
states.
Polls
have
showed
Obama
with a
wide
lead
over
Romney
among
women,
but some
recent
surveys
have
suggested
the gap
is
narrowing.
Both
candidates
seized
on a
question
in the
debate
about
inequities
in
workplace
salaries
to make
a broad
appeal
to women
voters.
"I want
to help
women in
America
get good
work by
getting
a
stronger
economy,"
said
Romney.
He
stressed
his
efforts
to
recruit
women
for top
administration
jobs
when he
was
Massachusetts
governor,
saying
the
outreach
produced
"whole
binders
full of
women."
The
offhand
phrase
quickly
ricocheted
around
cyberspace.
Obama
used the
question
to point
out
Romney's
plans to
end
federal
financing
for
Planned
Parenthood
and his
opposition
to
provisions
in the
president's
health-care
overhaul
that
ensure
contraception
is
covered
by
health
insurance.
The
debate
didn't
break a
lot of
new
ground,
although
Romney
signaled
a shift
in his
stance
on
immigration.
The GOP
nominee
previously
had said
he would
veto
legislation
to
provide
a path
to
legalization
for
young
illegal
immigrants
brought
to the
United
States
as
children.
But
Tuesday
night,
he said
such
young
people
"should
have a
pathway
to
become a
permanent
resident
of the
United
States."
As the
debates
unfold,
early
voting
is
already
under
way in
many
states,
and the
push to
bank as
many
early
ballots
as
possible
is in
overdrive.
Democrats
cheered
when the
Supreme
Court on
Tuesday
cleared
the way
for Ohio
voters
to cast
ballots
on the
three
days
before
Election
Day,
rejecting
a
request
by the
state's
Republican
elections
chief
and
attorney
general
to get
involved
in a
rancorous
battle
over
early
voting.
Obama's
campaign
and Ohio
Democrats
had sued
state
officials
over
changes
in state
law that
took
away the
three
days of
voting
for most
people.
All of
the
political
maneuvering
was
little
more
than
noise
for more
than 1.3
million
Americans:
They've
already
voted. |