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Battleground state blitz continues for Obama, Romney

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Obama’s aides were projecting more confidence, contending that their get-out-the-vote operation was driving thousands of Obama supporters to vote early and building a firewall for the president in battleground states. The mood, however, was also boosted by two outside factors.

First, former Secretary of State Colin Powell offered his endorsement in a morning interview on CBS, a reprise of his backing in 2008. As well, the Obama campaign happily watched — and fueled — continued conversation about Republican Indiana Senate candidate Richard Mourdock’s statement that pregnancy following a rape was “something that God intended to happen” — even if God did not condone rape.

“As we saw again this week, I don’t think any politician in Washington, most of whom are male, should be making health care decisions for women,” Obama said to cheers. “Women can make those decisions themselves.”

Romney, for his part, took a page from Obama’s campaign four years ago as he told Ohio voters that he was the candidate of “big change.” He cast his rival as the candidate of the “status quo.”

At his first of three rallies on his Ohio bus tour, Romney mentioned the phrase “big change” no less than a dozen times and argued that Obama had taken the country backward with his economic policies. He listed the nation’s current challenges: underperforming schools, the debt and joblessness.

“These challenges are big challenges. This election is therefore a big choice, and America wants to see big changes, and we’re going to bring big changes to get America strong again,” he said.

Romney said Obama’s policies had failed to get the economy moving.

“The president has the same old answers as in the past — he wants another stimulus, he wants more government workers, and he wants to raise taxes. There is no prospect whatsoever that that path will help our economy grow and put people to work and raise take-home pay,” he said.

Romney rolled across the state in his campaign bus Thursday with Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, who recently helped him prepare for the three presidential debates. They made a morning stop at a Cincinnati diner, where Romney ordered an omelet with peppers and onions, breakfast potatoes and grits, and they ate lunch together en route to the second rally of the day in Worthington, Ohio. (Obama’s version: a Florida doughnut shop, where he bought doughnuts for a young boy and local firefighters.)

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