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After Storm Hiatus, Presidential Race Is Back in Full Swing | After Storm Hiatus, Presidential Race Is Back in Full Swing |
(about 7 hours later) | |
WASHINGTON — The two presidential campaigns roared back to life on Thursday, ending a storm-imposed hiatus with urgent closing arguments and a flurry of cross-country rallies as Mitt Romney raced to overtake President Obama in the election’s final 100 hours. | WASHINGTON — The two presidential campaigns roared back to life on Thursday, ending a storm-imposed hiatus with urgent closing arguments and a flurry of cross-country rallies as Mitt Romney raced to overtake President Obama in the election’s final 100 hours. |
Mr. Obama enters the last stretch with a slight and consistent — but in some cases, shrinking — edge over Mr. Romney, his Republican rival, in polling from most of the 10 swing states where the campaigns are waging fierce and costly battles with television ads and armies of supporters. | |
The president returned to the trail Thursday amid a series of high-profile events this week that helped bolster his claims of bipartisan appeal. He received endorsements from Colin L. Powell, the former secretary of state, and Michael R. Bloomberg, the independent mayor of New York City. And on Wednesday, the president stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Chris Christie, the Republican governor of New Jersey, as the two toured the state’s devastated coastal communities. | |
But Mr. Romney’s withering, yearlong critique of the president’s economic stewardship has brought him to a virtual tie in national surveys. His campaign hopes that continued attacks combined with a renewed, bipartisan appeal to moderate and independent voters will help him overcome the president’s state-by-state organization. | But Mr. Romney’s withering, yearlong critique of the president’s economic stewardship has brought him to a virtual tie in national surveys. His campaign hopes that continued attacks combined with a renewed, bipartisan appeal to moderate and independent voters will help him overcome the president’s state-by-state organization. |
After spending close to $1 billion each, the two candidates are finishing the campaign where polls show they are strongest: with Mr. Obama stressing his pledge to protect the middle class and Mr. Romney promising to fix the nation’s economy. Mr. Romney’s campaign also signaled its intention to battle Mr. Obama on more fronts, with the campaign announcing on Thursday that he will make a stop in Pennsylvania on Sunday, an indication that Republican strategists believe they might be able to win a state that has been trending Democratic. | |
Both sides are bracing for Friday morning’s release of the October unemployment rate, a final piece of economic evidence that could either bolster Mr. Romney’s accusations of fiscal malpractice or provide further ammunition for the president’s case that the country’s struggling economy is finally headed in the right direction and creating jobs. | |
After avoiding attacks on Mr. Obama for 72 hours because of the storm, Mr. Romney plunged back into the fray in Roanoke, Va., mocking the president for proposing a cabinet-level post devoted to business development. Mr. Obama discussed the idea in an interview with MSNBC that was shown Monday, just as Mr. Romney was entering cease-fire mode. | |
“I don’t think adding a new chair in his cabinet will help add millions of jobs on Main Street,” Mr. Romney told an enthusiastic crowd Thursday morning at a family-owned factory. “We need a president who understands business, and I do.” | |
The campaign unveiled a new ad echoing those remarks and saying that the president’s “answer to everything” was simply adding another government bureaucrat. But at his rally, Mr. Romney also played down his own record as a businessman, focusing instead on how he would govern with the support of Democrats and independents should he win on Tuesday. | |
“We know something about the past, we’ve seen what his policies have produced,” Mr. Romney said in Virginia. “The only way to get this economy going is the kind of bold change I’ve described, real change from Day 1.” | “We know something about the past, we’ve seen what his policies have produced,” Mr. Romney said in Virginia. “The only way to get this economy going is the kind of bold change I’ve described, real change from Day 1.” |
Mr. Romney’s efforts to claim the mantle of change from Mr. Obama — who rode to victory in 2008 by promising a new kind of politics — drew sharp criticism from the president as he began the first of three rallies in three states on Thursday. Wearing a black Air Force One bomber jacket at a rally in Wisconsin, the president scoffed at Mr. Romney’s offer of a new direction. | |
“Let me tell you, Wisconsin,” Mr. Obama said. “We know what change looks like. And what the governor is offering sure ain’t change.” | |
At a sun-drenched rally in Las Vegas, Mr. Obama appeared at once sobered and galvanized by his tour of the devastation in New Jersey, drawing on the experience to frame his pitch for bipartisan cooperation and a robust government role in society. | |
“It reminds us that when disaster strikes, we see America at its best,” Mr. Obama said. “All the petty differences that consume us in normal times somehow melt away. There are no Democrats or Republicans in a storm — just fellow Americans.” | |
Even as Mr. Obama returned to the trail, the White House was intent on presenting him as deeply immersed in the storm recovery effort. On Air Force One from Wisconsin to Nevada, the president spoke with Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy of Connecticut, and joined a 20-minute conference call led by Mr. Christie. | |
Until Election Day, the president will be in nearly constant motion, flying to three states a day, as he works furiously to lock down what his campaign insists are narrow but durable leads. Mr. Obama was scheduled to spend all Friday in Ohio, and he is likely to return to the state at least one more time before Tuesday. | |
In addition, the president’s campaign released a television ad Thursday featuring effusive praise from Mr. Powell. The ad, which will run in 10 states, underscores Mr. Obama’s closing message by showing Mr. Powell, a Republican, declaring that “we ought to keep on the track that we are on.” | |
But the best barometer of how the campaigns felt about their chances on Thursday was the schedules they have set in place. | |
The president’s stop in Wisconsin was aimed at securing a state the campaign did not worry about before Mr. Romney chose a native son, Representative Paul D. Ryan, as his running mate. Mr. Ryan has campaigned extensively there. | |
The Obama campaign feels more confident about Nevada. Despite having one of the nation’s highest unemployment rates and millions of homes in foreclosure, the state has trended Democratic in recent elections. | |
On the other hand, Mr. Romney’s decision to spend all Thursday in Virginia comes a day after he campaigned in Florida. Both are Southern states the Republican campaign had hoped to have locked up by now. | |
Polls from NBC News, The Wall Street Journal and Marist out Thursday morning showed Mr. Obama holding on to narrow leads in Iowa and locked in tight races with Mr. Romney in Wisconsin and New Hampshire. | |
Michael D. Shear reported from Washington, and Mark Landler from Las Vegas. Michael Barbaro contributed from Virginia. | |
Michael Barbaro contributed reporting. |