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Obama, Romney return to political arena after Sandy hiatus

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The comments by Romney marked a return to criticizing Obama on the campaign trail, which the GOP nominee halted during Sandy and its immediate aftermath. He said the president’s slogan of “Forward” ought to be “Forewarned.”

He also paid a visit to a shuttered barbecue joint in Richmond, Va., that his campaign has used as the scene of a commercial that attacks Obama’s handling of the economy. Romney posed for photos as he spoke to Rhoda Elliott, the niece of the founder of Bill’s Barbecue.

“So what happened?” Romney asked her.

Elliott said the family business, which once included 13 restaurants, began declining six years ago, which would have been during the administration of President George W. Bush. However, she said, “five years ago it rippled a little more, and then it really hit and from there things just got rougher and rougher, the taxes, federal regulations — the food regulations themselves cost each independent restaurant thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars.”

Romney mostly listened, occasionally interjecting, “Yeah,” as she spoke. The conversation underlined points he has made about stewardship of the economy, and reinforced the web ad featuring Bill’s Barbecue, one of multiple new ads that attempt to sum up the case against Obama.

The Obama campaign also launched a new ad, a second television spot challenging what it says are Romney’s misleading ads about the auto industry outsourcing jobs from Ohio to China. The new ad attempts to raise questions about Romney’s character.

It highlights statements from fact checkers and General Motors and Chrysler executives disputing the Romney spot, which implied that the auto companies were moving jobs to China during Obama’s tenure. The companies say they added jobs in China to serve the Asian auto market, but have continued hiring in this country.

“We know the truth, Mitt,” the ad reads as it shows a clip of Romney reciting the headline from the Op-Ed article he wrote that has come to haunt him: “Let Detroit Go Bankrupt.”

In talking about the ad, Obama campaign officials made it clear that it was intended as more than just a factual rebuke. “This raises a character issue,” Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

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