Round Two: Obama faces off with surging Romney

Agence France-Presse

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Barack Obama will be "strong" and "passionate" in his make-or-break second debate with Mitt Romney, a top advisor said, as the president's re-election hopes hang in the balance

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (R) and US President Barack Obama (L) greet one another at Magness Arena moments before the start of their first debate at the University of Denver in Denver, Colorado, October 3, 2012. AFP PHOTO / Pool / Michael REYNOLDS

HEMPSTEAD, New York, United States (UPDATED) – Struggling Barack Obama and surging Mitt Romney face off Tuesday, October 16 (Wednesday, October 17 in Manila), in a make-or-break debate, vying for command of the presidential race just three weeks from election day.

Obama’s team promised a “strong” and “passionate” performance by the president in the second of three showdowns, while Romney’s campaign, believing the Democratic incumbent will come out swinging, predicted outright victory come November 6.

The rivals tangle at Hofstra University on Long Island in a 90-minute town hall-style debate from 9:00 pm (0100 GMT Wednesday) with CNN’s Candy Crowley acting as moderator and questions coming from 80 undecided likely voters.

Romney’s nimble and confident first outing on October 3 in Denver, Colorado, combined with Obama’s disastrous showing, left the presidential contest in a dead heat, with some polls showing the Republican surging ahead.

Another poor display from Obama would significantly increase the chances that despite all the hope and promise of his election four years ago the nation’s first black leader is consigned to history as a one-term president.

Campaigns typically downplay expectations ahead of a debate, but a longtime Obama lieutenant predicted the president would come roaring back.

“I think you are going to see an exceptionally strong debate performance tonight from the president,” Robert Gibbs said on MSNBC.

“I think you will see somebody who will be strong, who will be passionate, who will be energetic.”

Senator John Kerry, who has been playing Romney in Obama’s debate prep, predicted the debate would be fun, saying the president was “excited about talking about his vision for the next four years.”

Kerry hinted Obama could dissect Romney’s record as governor of Massachusetts, which he branded a “charade” and condemned Republicans for making an attack on the US consulate in Benghazi into a “political football.”

Obama emerged from his debate camp in Virginia to fly to New York and told reporters “I feel fabulous.”

He and Romney conducted walkthroughs of the debate site before each settled in to their final preparations.

Obama dined with his wife Michelle on steak and potatoes, while Romney ate a dinner of rotisserie chicken, with sides of spinach and baked potato, with his wife Ann and five sons.

Team Romney has had Obama on the ropes, and his campaign signaled confidence by predicting that the Republican would triumph in the key state of Ohio and nationwide.

“Our campaign clearly has the momentum heading into these last few weeks, as evidenced by steady movement in the polls toward governor Romney, and increased enthusiasm on the ground at our events,” senior aide Rich Beeson said.

Recent polls in the crucial Midwestern battleground state, which no Republican has lost and gone on to win the White House, show Romney steadily eroding the president’s narrow lead there.

But Obama got a boost on Tuesday when the US Supreme Court ruled that Ohio cannot limit early voting, as the state’s Republican-led legislature did last year. That move had been seen as a blow against Obama’s African-American voting base.

Obama’s campaign manager Jim Messina told reporters here that Obama retained multiple routes to get to the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency and dismissed the Romney campaign’s confidence in Ohio.

At Hofstra, Romney must prove his sure-footed performance two weeks ago was no fluke and faces the added challenge of the town hall-style format, which will feature more interaction and participation from the audience.

Some expect Obama to go after Romney on the challenger’s comments that 47 percent of Americans are “victims” who depend on government and his record as a multimillionaire businessman, something the president did not do in Denver.

Brett O’Donnell, one of the country’s premier political debate coaches, said Romney cannot roll back on his heels.

“Clearly the president will go on the offense more, he’ll be more aggressive,” O’Donnell told Fox News.

“Governor Romney’s got to avoid taking the bait and getting on defense. He’s got to stay on offense as well.”

Many national polls show Romney and Obama locked in a tie, but the challenger can claim undeniable momentum in the battleground states that will decide who will live in the White House come January.

A USA Today/Gallup poll Tuesday showed a startling erosion of support for Obama among women, who now back Obama just 49-48 percent, in 12 swing states.

The poll shows Romney’s overall lead at 50-46 percent among likely voters in the swing states, compared with a 49-47 Obama lead among registered voters.

The Obama campaign blasted the methodology of the poll. – Brigitte Dusseau, Agence France-Presse

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