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Candidates return to Wisconsin as Obama takes edge in Marquette poll

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In conference calls with reporters Wednesday, both national campaigns claimed the political upper hand. The Obama campaign said the electoral map tilts decidedly in its favor. Wins by Obama in Ohio, Wisconsin, and either Nevada or Iowa would give him an electoral majority, and averaging recent polls, he leads in all four.

“We have the map and they have the myths,” said Obama campaign manager Jim Messina. “There’s no Romney momentum in the battleground states. There’s only smoke and mirrors.”

Romney campaign officials said the fundamentals of the race favor their side.

“Take a look at the big picture. Americans are negative about the direction of the country,” said Romney pollster Neil Newhouse. “Mitt has an intensity advantage (among his supporters) that will impact turnout. The race comes down to independents, and we lead among independents.”

Ryan barnstormed the state Wednesday, with stops in Eau Claire, Ashwaubenon and Racine, before heading home to Janesville, where he planned to take his children trick-or-treating for Halloween.

“On day one, we will reverse this slide toward economic stagnation,” Ryan told more than 700 cheering supporters in the headquarters of FulfilNet Inc., a marketing services firm in Ashwaubenon. “We will get this country back on track again.”

Ryan said that he and Romney would get to work immediately to repeal the Affordable Care Act, get the Keystone Pipeline going, re-energize the nation’s oil and gas industries, and reduce what he called costly regulations.

“Let’s see it all the way through,” Ryan said of Tuesday’s general election.

In Racine, Ryan took aim at government assistance to the U.S. auto industry, now a key political flash point in battleground states in the upper Midwest.

“If they think this was a success story, the facts speak for themselves,” Ryan said. “President Obama took GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy. Taxpayers still stand to lose $25 billion from the president’s politically managed bankruptcy. These companies, Chrysler in particular, we know this story, are now choosing to expand manufacturing overseas.”

“These are the facts,” Ryan added. “Those facts are inconvenient for the president. But no one disputes them.”

Earlier, Biden delivered a sharply worded attack against advertisements the Romney campaign was running on the 2009 auto bailout, with the implication that bailout was helping move manufacturing overseas. Executives for GM and Chrysler also took issue with the ads.

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