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Obama promises supporters he is in it to win it

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (MCT) — His tepid debate performance has turned a September surge into an October swoon, and President Barack Obama has traded his campaign swagger for a more urgent posture, insisting to supporters that he will finish strong and calling on them to step up as well.

After a weekend trip heavy with fundraising stops, Obama returned to more traditional campaigning Tuesday in Ohio, the state that his team has long viewed as a potential bulwark against Romney. It was his 30th trip there since taking office and the 15th in 2012.

The president’s first order of business Tuesday evening: asking students on the Ohio State campus to register and vote. The event was timed to coincide with the deadline for voter registration, and Obama told a crowd of 15,000 that buses would be ready to take them from the event to an early vote location.

“Don’t wait. Do not delay. Go vote today,” Obama urged. “We’ve got some work to do. We’ve got an election to win. Everything that we fought for in 2008 is on the line in 2012.”

But just before Air Force One touched down, bad news surfaced in the form of a new CNN poll that showed him with a lead of just 4 percentage points. That was half the lead he held in pre-debate polls in Ohio.

Nationally, a Gallup tracking poll Tuesday showed Romney with a 2-point edge among likely voters—a measure that, as with the Ohio poll, was within the margin of error and suggests a toss-up contest. Before Wednesday’s first debate, Obama had been steadily building a lead in surveys nationally and in key states.

Aides insisted that the tightening numbers were not a cause for panic. The success of the Democratic convention to start September and Romney’s missteps in the weeks after — most notably the release of a surreptitiously recorded video showing him dismissing 47 percent of Americans as “victims” — pushed the president’s level of support to or very near his ceiling in the earlier surveys, they argued. And they suggested that he has often rebounded when under pressure.

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