Billy Hallowell
BOCA RATON, Fla. (TheBlaze/AP) — Their debates now history,
President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney on Tuesday open a
two-week sprint to Election Day powered by adrenaline, a boatload of
campaign cash and a determination to reach Nov. 6 with no would-have,
should-have regrets in their neck-and-neck fight to the finish.
From here, the candidates will vastly accelerate their travel, ad
spending and grass-roots mobilizing in a race that’s likely to cost
upward of $2 billion by the time it all ends.
All the focus now is on locking down support in the nine states whose
electoral votes are still considered up for grabs: Colorado, Iowa,
Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Wisconsin and
Virginia. No surprise then, that Obama campaigns Tuesday in Florida and
Ohio while Romney heads West to Nevada and Colorado.
Neither candidate scored a knockout punch in their third and last
debate Monday. Romney reined in the confrontational sniping that had
marked the candidates’ last testy encounter, while Obama remaining
somewhat contentious in his tone. And though the stated topic this time
was foreign policy, both kept circling back to their plans for
strengthening the fragile U.S. economy — Job 1 to American voters.
Closing out their trio of debates, Obama concisely summed up this
pivot point in Campaign 2012: “You’ve now heard three debates, months of
campaigning and way too many TV commercials. And now you’ve got a
choice.”
The president framed it as a choice between his own record of “real progress” and the “wrong and reckless” ideas of Romney.
Romney countered by sketching “two different paths” offered by the
candidates, one of decline under Obama and one of brighter promise from
himself.
“I know what it takes to get this country back,” he pledged.
With polls showing the race remains incredibly tight, first lady
Michelle Obama made a prediction before the candidates left Florida that
neither side would dispute: “This election will be closer than the last
one — that’s the only guarantee.”
Obama made it look easy in 2008: He won 365 electoral votes to 173
for Republican John McCain. And he got 53 percent of the popular vote,
to 46 percent for McCain.
With 270 electoral votes needed for victory, Obama at this point
appears on track to win 237 while Romney appears to have 191. The other
110 are in the hotly contested battleground states.
The candidates’ strategies for getting to 270 are implicit in their
itineraries for the next two weeks and in their spending on campaign
ads.
Obama and his Democratic allies already have placed $47 million in ad
spending across battlegrounds in the campaign’s final weeks, while
Romney and the independent groups supporting his candidacy have
purchased $53 million, significantly upping their buys in Florida, Ohio
and Virginia. And both sides are expected to pad their totals.
After Obama and Vice President Joe Biden campaign together in Ohio on
Tuesday, the president splits off on what his campaign is describing as
a two-day “around-the-clock” blitz to six more battleground states.
He’ll be in constant motion — making voter calls and sleeping aboard Air
Force One as he flies overnight Wednesday from Nevada to Tampa, Fla.
The vice president is midway through a three-day tour of
uber-battleground Ohio, and Obama’s team contends its best way of
ensuring victory is a win there. The campaign says internal polling
gives Obama a lead in the Midwestern battleground state, in large part
because of the popularity of the president’s bailout of the auto
industry.
But even if Obama loses Ohio, his campaign sees another pathway to
the presidency by nailing New Hampshire, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nevada and
Colorado.
Romney and running mate Paul Ryan are picking up the pace of their
campaigning as well, and their schedule reflects an overarching strategy
to drive up GOP vote totals in areas already friendly to the Republican
nominee.
The Denver suburbs. Cincinnati. Reno, Nev. They’re places that
typically vote Republican, but where McCain fell short of the margins he
needed to defeat Obama. To win in all-important Ohio, the GOP nominee
must outperform McCain in typically Republican areas.
Romney and Ryan start their two-week dash in Henderson, Nev., then
hopscotch to the Denver area for a rally with rocker-rapper Kid Rock and
country music’s Rodney Atkins at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre. Then
Romney heads back to Nevada, on to Iowa and then east to Ohio for three
overnights in a row. By week’s end, he’s likely to be back in Florida.
The following week brings a significant uptick in Romney’s schedule.
Aides say he’ll touch down in two or three states a day, or hold that
many daily events in big states like Florida.
Both candidates are done holding fundraisers — no doubt a happy thought for the two of them.
But hold on to your wallets: Supporters will still be out there
raising money, and there will be plenty of emails asking for cash right
up to the finish.
The president began the month with a little less cash available than
Romney, but both have impressive sums to blow through in the home
stretch: $150 million for Obama and the Democrats, $183 million for
Romney and the Republicans.
Immediately after the final debate, Obama pinged his supporters with
an email that said simply: “This is in your hands now. Chip in $5 or
more, and let’s go win.”
Republicans are dramatically bumping up ad spending in the biggest
battlegrounds: In Florida, their spending this week hit $9.2 million
after averaging about $5.8 million over the last four weeks. In Ohio,
GOP ad spending jumped to $9.6 million this week from an average of $6.9
million over the last four weeks. Virginia saw a bump up to $7.9
million, compared with about $5.2 million over the last four weeks.
Out on the road, Romney has been demonstrating more confidence than
ever. He’s started making more impromptu stops at local establishments
near campaign rallies, a departure from his typically buttoned-down
schedule through the summer. His crowds are bigger and more energized,
too. And some voters who’ve attended his recent rallies say his
performance helps them to see Romney as a plausible president — not just
a candidate.
Obama, for his part, has been projecting a looser, more easygoing demeanor as he campaigns, using humor to undercut Romney.
He riffs about his rival’s “Romnesia” — a lighthearted way to drive home his opponent’s shifting policy positions.
Both sides are working furiously to lock down every possible early
vote, and the results are evident in the 4.4 million people who’ve
already cast ballots.
Obama will detour to Chicago on Thursday to make a statement about
voting early by becoming the first president to cast his own early
ballot.
The country is likely to easily exceed the early voting totals from
2008, when 30 percent of all ballots were cast ahead of Election Day,
according to Michael McDonald, a George Mason University professor who
tracks early voting closely.
In Ohio, McDonald said, numbers are up across the board — in rural,
suburban and urban areas. As many as 45 percent of Ohio voters may cast
early ballots, compared with less than 30 percent four years ago, he
said. The numbers in North Carolina seem to be shifting in the
Republicans’ direction, McDonald says, and those in Iowa “seem to
confirm polling showing a slight Obama lead” there.
This year’s quartet of debates — three for the presidential
candidates and one for the veeps – started on a friendly note, with
Romney wishing Obama and wife Michelle a happy 20th anniversary, but
goodwill quickly deteriorated. Both men were at times argumentative and
the back-and-forth often shed more heat than light.
Romney came on like gangbusters in the first debate and left a
listless Obama reeling as GOP momentum surged. Biden poured it on for
the Democrats in his faceoff with Ryan, rolling out a full complement of
smirks, eye-rolls and headshakes. Obama himself rebounded in the
fractious town-hall debate. Both Obama and Romney were better behaved in
their final faceoff, with the president playing up his
commander-in-chief credentials to full effect and Romney playing it safe
to avoid making mistakes.
From it all — more than 65,000 words of debate rhetoric – there was
no signature moment that is likely to be remembered much past Election
Day.
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