PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) - Republicans Mitt
Romney and Paul Ryan went back to school on Saturday to rally college
students in all corners of all-important Ohio and hammer at President
Barack Obama for going easy on China over unfair trade practices. Obama
took precious time off the campaign trail to practice for the next
debate against his GOP rival.
It was an unspoken
acknowledgment of the importance that Obama attaches to upping his game
in Debate No.2 that the president is largely dropping out of sight for
five straight days in the final weeks of the race to prepare for
Tuesday's encounter in Hempstead, N .Y.
Even while cloistered for
debate prep at a sprawling resort in Williamsburg, Va., though, the
president didn't completely cede the spotlight to Romney. His weekly
radio and Internet address highlighted the Obama administration's work
to revive the U.S. auto industry - a message aimed squarely at
working-class voters in manufacturing-heavy states like Ohio.
Romney, for his part, told a
crowd of more than 3,000 people at Shawnee State University in
Portsmouth that Obama was ducking an important decision on whether China
is manipulating its currency to gain a trade advantage. A decision was
due on Monday, but the Treasury Department said Friday the decision
won't come until after global finance officials meet in early November.
That means a decision is unlikely before the Nov. 6 election.
"It's time for us to stand up to China for their cheating," Romney declared. "It's got to stop."
Romney framed the issue
squarely as a matter of jobs, saying cheap Chinese products were driving
American companies out of business.
"We've got to get those jobs back and make trade to be fair," Romney declared.
Ryan, too, criticized the
administration for failing to hold China accountable for its trade
practices. During a morning appearance in northeastern Ohio at
Youngstown State University, he told a crowd of about 1,400 that his
hometown of Janesville, Wis., was much like theirs - a "blue-collar,
factory town" where the struggles of the auto industry hit home hard.
Ryan said the president had led the country toward a higher national debt, steeper taxes and insufficient job growth.
"We can't keep going down this path," he said. "We can't keep accepting this is the new normal."
The Wisconsin congressman
then hopscotched to Bowling Green State University, in the northwestern
part of the state, where he grabbed a bratwurst with mustard at the
college Republicans' tailgate party before the school's football team
took on his alma mater, Miami (Ohio) University.
The Obama campaign dismissed the Republicans' tough talk on China as nothing more than talk.
"Mitt Romney will never
crack down on China's cheating - just look at his record," Obama
campaign spokesman Danny Kanner said in a statement. He said Romney had
opposed Obama administration efforts to impose tariffs on Chinese-made
tires and had invested in companies that shipped American jobs to China.
Obama's campaign upped its
celebrity quotient as the two sides claw for any advantage in a tight
race: Actor Morgan Freeman's commanding voice narrates a new ad telling
voters that Obama has met the nation's challenges and "the last thing we
should do is turn back now."
On Thursday, Bruce
Springsteen will team up with former President Bill Clinton to rally
Obama voters in Parma, Ohio, in what will be the singer's first
political appearance this campaign. "The Boss" plans a second event
Thursday, in Ames, Iowa. Springsteen campaigned for Obama in 2008, too.
Both sides are devoting
huge time and effort to Ohio, this year's battleground to end all
battlegrounds, where polls show Obama with a slight edge over Romney.
Saturday's emphasis by the two sides on the auto industry and
manufacturing jobs was designed to connect with blue-collar voters
there.
Both sides also are keenly
aware of the importance of this year's series of three presidential
debates. Romney's strong performance in the first debate on Oct. 3 gave
his campaign a much-needed jolt of energy, and the GOP nominee said his
campaign still had post-debate momentum over Obama.
"His campaign is about
smaller and smaller things, and our campaign is about bigger and bigger
crowds, fighting for a bright future," Romney said on warm, sunny fall
day.
Joe Biden's aggressive
counterpunch in a debate with Ryan on Thursday cheered Democrats, but
some critics thought the vice president overdid the theatrics with his
frequent eye rolls, headshakes and broad grins suggesting incredulity.
Obama's campaign has
acknowledged he didn't practice enough before his widely panned
performance in the first debate. Some sessions were cut short, others
canceled altogether, mainly because of developments in Libya, where four
Americans were killed at a U.S. consulate.
The campaign has resisted
calls from some Democrats to shake up Obama's debate team. Senior
advisers David Axelrod and David Plouffe, along with former White House
officials Anita Dunn and Ron Klain, still are running the preparations.
The president may have
picked up a few pointers from Biden's debate with Ryan. Obama watched
the vice presidential debate from aboard Air Force One and would chime
in when Biden made a strong point.
"That's a good one," Obama said, according to aides.
Tuesday's town hall-style
debate at Hofstra University will have an audience of about 80 undecided
voters selected by the Gallup Organization. Moderator Candy Crowley of
CNN will select from among questions on foreign and domestic policy
submitted by the audience. The final debate, covering foreign policy,
will be Oct. 22 in Boca Raton, Fla.
Romney spent nearly four
hours Saturday morning at a Columbus hotel preparing for the next
debate, then boarded his campaign bus for Shawnee State. From there, the
Romney bus headed for Lebanon in southwest Ohio.
The Obama campaign isn't
leaving Ohio unguarded for long: Michelle Obama will visit Delaware and
Cleveland on Monday and the president will be in Athens on Wednesday.
To help keep Democratic ads
like Freeman's new appeal for Obama up and running in the hotly
contested battleground states, the president dispatched Biden to a pair
of private fundraisers in Connecticut and New York on Saturday.
___
Associated Press writers
Julie Pace in Williamsburg, Va., John Seewer in Bowling Green, Ohio, and
Kantele Franko in Youngstown, Ohio, contributed to this report.
___
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