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Romney and Obama clash over how to create jobs

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This and other polls consistently have found that voters tend to think Obama can empathize more than Romney with their struggles. In the Post poll, Obama led 53 percent to 39 percent when Florida voters were asked which candidate “understands economic problems people are having.” And he led Romney 60 percent to 35 percent when respondents were asked which candidate will do a better job “advancing the interests of the middle class.”

Similarly, a Quinnipiac University/CBS News/New York Times poll last week found that likely voters in Florida favored Obama over Romney 51 percent to 46 percent when asked which would do a better job on the economy.

Obama’s prospects may have brightened because of improvements in Florida’s economy since the state’s unemployment rate peaked at 11.4 percent in January 2010 — though the 8.8 percent rate in August remains stubbornly high. Worse, state economists say that more than 90 percent of the decline was because discouraged unemployed workers abandoned their job search.

“Although we are creating jobs, people are earning less, and the jobs that are coming back are not the higher-paid quality jobs in manufacturing and construction,” said Alayne Unterberger, associate director of the Research Institute on Social and Economic Policy at Florida International University.

Nevertheless, 28,200 nonagricultural jobs were created in August, the biggest monthly increase since April 2011 and a significant net gain despite a loss of 5,200 government positions. In the past 12 months, the private sector has added almost 80,000 jobs in the Sunshine State — offset somewhat by 10,300 state and local government jobs that have disappeared.

Romney has promised to take a businesslike approach to government while slashing taxes, government spending and federal regulations — such as clean-air and clean-water rules — that he says stifle job creation. He also wants to encourage states to enact “right-to-work” laws that make it easier for workers to avoid joining labor unions or contributing money to their causes.

Obama tried to spur the economy by pumping about $800 billion of federal “stimulus” money into construction work, clean-energy projects and research while aiding the unemployed, cutting employment taxes and bolstering local and state spending on teachers, police and government workers. On the campaign trail, though, Obama rarely talks about the stimulus bill, which economists say broke the fall of the economy but failed to spark a robust recovery or create millions more sustainable private-sector jobs.

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