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Obama, Romney resume campaign as they dash to finish line

English.news.cn   2012-11-02 01:09:58            
 • With superstorm Sandy dissipating, Obama and Romney are back on the campaign trail.
 • The president continued to tout his own record and derided Romney for advocating for change.
 • Romney, on the other hand, is playing defense in Virginia.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (Xinhua) -- With superstorm Sandy dissipating, U.S. President Barack Obama and his Republican challenger Mitt Romney are on Thursday back on the campaign trail, trying to make up for the lost time as they dash towards the finish line.

At a campaign rally in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Obama said the U.S. economy is turning around under his leadership, but Romney is advocating "top down" economics that preceded the downturn.

The president continued to tout his own record, citing the health care law, new financial regulations, education and research programs, and efforts to reduce federal debt by raising taxes on the wealthy as well as budget cuts.

He derided Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, for advocating for change, a slogan made famous by Obama in 2008.

"We know what change looks like," Obama said. "What the governor's offering sure ain't change."

Obama, who canceled campaign events for the first half of the week, is holding three events Thursday, besides Wisconsin, he is also visiting Las Vegas, Nevada, and Denver, Colorado, trying to solidify his razor-thin lead in those swing states.

Romney, on the other hand, is playing defense in Virginia, where latest polls have shown his momentum has stalled. He is holding three events in Roanoke, Doswell and Virginia Beach, all in the Republican leaning southern part of the state.

During his speech delivered in Roanoke, Romney wasted little time before he ended the informal political truce with Obama when Sandy hit, and resumed attacks on the president's record.

"Do you want four more years like the last four years? Do you want four more years where 23 million Americans are struggling to have a good job? Do you want four more years where earnings are going down every year? Do you want four more years of trillion- dollar deficits in Washington?" asked Romney. "There's no question in my view that we really can't have four more years like the last four years."

Noting the Obama campaign has been playing game with his last name, Romney suggested that Chicago should change their slogan of "forward" to "forewarned."

"I know the Obama folks are chanting four more years, four more years, but our chant is this -- five more days, five more days," said Romney.

The two candidates are making closing arguments before Americans head to polling stations across the country next Tuesday, and at the same time trying to make up for the lost time when Sandy hit, cramming over a dozen events into the last several days.

Related:

Obama cancels more campaign events to focus on Sandy

WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- Heading into the final week before Election Day, U.S. President Barack Obama has to cancel Wednesday' s campaign events in order to focus on the rescue and response efforts for deadly and devastating super storm Sandy, said the White House spokesman on Tuesday.

Obama will remain in the capital on Wednesday to monitor the response to super storm Sandy and ensure that "all federal resources continue to be provided to support ongoing state and local recovery efforts," said White House spokesman Jay Carney in a statement on Tuesday. Full story

U.S. voter turnout likely to fall short of previous two elections: poll

WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- Voter turnout in the 2012 U.S. presidential election will fall short of what it was in 2004 and 2008, a pollster said Tuesday.

Registered voters reported giving less thought to the election, and were less likely to rate their chance of voting than in 2004 and 2008, two higher-turnout elections, the national pollster Gallup said. Full story

Asian Americans could be x factor in U.S. race for swing states

WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 (Xinhua) -- Asian Americans could determine the electoral outcome in U.S. swing states with large Asian populations, as President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are neck-and-neck in the race, experts said.

In undecided states with rapidly growing Asian-American populations such as Nevada and Virginia, Asian Americans could provide the push that puts either candidate over the finish line amid a neck-in-neck race, said Mee Moua, president of the Asian American Justice Center and former Minnesota state senator, in an interview with Xinhua. Full story

 

 

Editor: Bi Mingxin
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