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Romney and Obama clash over how to create jobs

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — About one in four of the nation’s new jobs last month was created in Florida, a hopeful sign that the stricken state will slowly resume its customary role as an engine for economic growth during the next four years.

Economists say it might happen, and Florida voters certainly hope so.

While competing for Florida’s 29 electoral votes, President Barack Obama and Republican candidate Mitt Romney will convey conflicting messages of hope and despair when they discuss economic issues during their debate Wednesday night. They know that voter perceptions about the direction of the economy could decide the election, especially in the big boom-to-bust swing state of Florida.

Florida polls and voter comments last week indicate disillusionment with Obama after four years of plunging property values and long-term unemployment — but also wariness about Romney. Many voters sense that neither candidate holds the key to revving up the economy and creating jobs.

“You have to agree with a lot of people who feel that Obama has never run a business and doesn’t know how to get the economy moving,” said Dennis Cronin, 69, of Fort Lauderdale. He said he lost his savings in the 2008 stock-market crash and is struggling to start a tropical-plant business.

Cronin nevertheless says he’s inclined to vote for Obama “and see if he can turn it around. Romney’s not quite trustworthy. He is courting rich people, as opposed to Obama, and he is not giving specifics yet about his plans. Clearly, he doesn’t have any magic wand that would cure all.”

Republicans figure the jobs issue will trump all others — such as health care and immigration — and they are counting on voters venting their frustration when they troop to the polls.

“If we end up fighting about these peripheral issues, that’s the only chance Obama has in Florida,” said John Dowless, a Republican campaign consultant in Orlando. “If we keep the focus on balancing the budget and the economy, Republicans will win.”

But recent polls indicate that Florida voters are about equally divided or slightly favor Obama on economic issues.

A Washington Post poll released last week found that, when asked which candidate they trusted “to do a better job handling the economy,” Florida voters favored Obama over Romney, 49 percent to 45 percent.

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