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Romney surges as White House race narrows

Agence France-Presse

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Republican Mitt Romney surged into the lead in national opinion polls of the White House race on Tuesday, October 9, his reward for beating President Barack Obama in last week's first head-to-head debate

MITT'S FOREIGN POLICY. US Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney delivers a foreign policy speech at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia, on October 8, 2012. Romney called for a change of course in America's Middle East policy, accusing President Barack Obama of sitting on the sidelines in the face of a "profound upheaval" across the region. AFP PHOTO/Jim WATSON

AKRON, Ohio, United States – Republican Mitt Romney surged into the lead in national opinion polls of the White House race on Tuesday, October 9, his reward for beating President Barack Obama in last week’s first head-to-head debate.

As both candidates arrived in perennial kingmaker state Ohio, top Obama aides put a brave face on the president’s slide, four weeks from election day, insisting they had always known his re-election bid would be tough.

A flurry of new polls Tuesday showed the delayed impact of Romney’s debate triumph in Denver.

For the first time since he accepted the Republican Party nomination, Romney topped the widely-read poll of polls conducted by the RealClearPolitics website, albeit by only 0.7 points.

And he led Obama by two points in daily tracking polls by Gallup and Investors Business Daily. The pair were tied in another tracking poll by Rasmussen, with both on 48 percent.

Nevertheless, national polls predicting the result of the popular vote are only one reflection of the race and campaign chieftains are more interested in the eight or so swing states that will decide the election.

Obama is up in most battlegrounds, though full data is yet to emerge on local races following the debate.

And in a welcome respite for the president’s camp, struggling to shake off the fallout of last week’s listless debate performance, a CNN/ORC poll showed Obama holding steady in Ohio.

Obama led by 51 to 47 percent among likely voters in the state, which no Republican has lost while winning the White House and which the Obama camp sees as a huge step toward the 270 electoral votes needed to win on November 6.

Romney’s senior aide Kevin Madden told reporters the campaign was not getting carried away by Romney’s sudden spurt, despite mounting excitement among Republicans, many of whom feared the race was slipping away from them.

“I think you can’t put too much stock in this idea of momentum. It’s a very elusive thing,” he said aboard Romney’s campaign plane.

“We still believe this is going to be a campaign that is very close, but we do see a lot of enthusiasm from a lot of our core supporters, and we see a lot of undecided voters that are taking a new look at Governor Romney.”

Obama’s camp insisted, with some justification, it has always predicted a tight fight, with the president running for re-election in an uncertain economic environment.

“We’ve always felt this race would be close,” campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Air Force One.

“We’ve always run this race like we’re five points down. We know that there are going to be many ups and downs.”

Obama planned a rally at Ohio State University, on the first day of early voting in the state, as Romney headed for Cuyahoga Falls outside Cleveland with New Jersey’s plain spoken Governor Chris Christie along for the ride.

Romney also stopped in another close swing state, Iowa, seeking to build on his polling wave on a political map that still favors Obama, despite wobbles in his campaign.

The focus of the race is increasingly turning to Thursday’s debate clash between Vice President Joe Biden and Romney’s running mate Paul Ryan, which is seen as key to Obama’s hopes of checking Romney’s sudden surge.

Obama has tried to reassure disappointed Democrats that he is still hungry for victory ahead of his debate rematches with Romney on October 16 and 22.

“Listen, after the debate, I had a bunch of folks come to me (saying) — ‘don’t be so polite, don’t be so nice.'”

“But I want everybody to understand something — what was being presented wasn’t leadership, that’s salesmanship,” Obama said in San Francisco Monday.

At another event, Obama vowed: “I am pretty competitive and I very much intend to win this election.”

Romney’s itinerary Tuesday was no mistake: should Obama win both Iowa and Ohio, the Republican would have to counter with victory in several states seen as solidly Democratic if he is to oust the president from the White House.

The Obama camp said it has superior organization in Ohio, with more 1,200 local officers to identify and drive out voters, and plans to stress Obama’s backing of an auto industry bailout which Romney opposed.

“Ohio is Obama Country. We absolutely feel that,” Psaki said.

The Obama campaign Tuesday had a sarcastic new ad pecking the Republican over his plan to cut subsidies for PBS television, home of the Sesame Street kids show and the Big Bird character.

“Mitt Romney knows it’s not Wall Street you have to worry about, it’s Sesame Street,” the ad said, jokingly describing the friendly yellow bird as the “evil genius” towering over financial felons like Ken Lay and Bernie Madoff.

“Mitt Romney. Taking on our enemies, no matter where they nest,” the announcer of the television ad says, pressing home Obama’s contention that Romney would let Wall Street run wild.

Romney replied in Iowa that these “are tough times, with real serious issues. So you have to scratch your head when the president spends the last week talking about saving Big Bird.” – Michael Mathes, Agence France-Presse


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