Candidates gird for 2nd debate

Aggressive Obama promised; Romney team touts advantage

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney kisses his wife, Ann, as he leaves the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Belmont, Mass., on Sunday.
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney kisses his wife, Ann, as he leaves the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Belmont, Mass., on Sunday.

— As Mitt Romney’s campaign claimed new momentum in the race for the White House, President Barack Obama’s political advisers on Sunday promised the incumbent would unleash his more aggressive side in Tuesday’s debate to prevent their Republican rival from delivering another “magical and theatrical performance.”

Obama and Romney hunkered down in private debate preparation for much of the day as aides offered a pre-debate sparring match on television.

They disagreed on much, but agreed that Romney bested Obama in their first meeting nearly two weeks ago - a performance that shifted the direction of a race that had favored the president but since has tightened in national and battleground-state polls.

“He knows Mitt Romney had a better night at the first debate,” Obama spokesman Jennifer Psaki said of the president. “The American people should expect to see a much more energized President Obama.”

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AP

President Barack Obama makes phone calls to volunteers at an Organizing for America field office with Alexa Kissinger (left) on Sunday in Williamsburg, Va.

Ed Gillespie, senior adviser to the Romney campaign, quipped that the former Massachusetts governor would be prepared regardless of Obama’s adjustments: “The president can change his style. He can change his tactics. He can’t change his record.”

Obama spent the day with aides in swing state Virginia, while Romney stayed close to his Boston-area home ahead of Tuesday’s prime-time, town-hall-style debate at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., exactly three weeks before the Nov. 6 election. Through today, either absentee or in-person early voting has begun in 43 states.

Romney’s advisers suggested the Republican nominee would continue to moderate his message - in tone, if not substance - as he did in the Oct. 3 meeting to help broaden his appeal to undecided voters. In recent days, Romney has promised his tax plan would not benefit higher earners, emphasized his work with Democrats as Massachusetts governor and downplayed plans to strengthen the nation’s abortion laws.

He told an Iowa newspaper this week, for example, that he would not pursue abortion related legislation if elected. That’s in direct conflict with last year’s pledge to the antiabortion group, the Susan B. Anthony List, to cut federal funding from Planned Parenthood and support legislation to “protect unborn children who are capable of feeling pain from abortion.”

“I think Mitt Romney’s performance was, indeed, magical and theatrical. Magical and theatrical largely because for 90 minutes he walked away from a campaign he had been running for more than six years previous to that,” Obama senior campaign adviser Robert Gibbs said of the first debate.

While the debates have proved critical, they are one element in larger campaigns that involve extensive ground games in virtually every state across the nation and a television ad war that may consume $1 billion before Election Day.

Romney on Sunday released a new television spot showcasing footage from running mate Paul Ryan’s first and only face off with Vice President Joe Biden last week. The ad features clips of Ryan saying the government “can’t keep spending money we don’t have.”

The comments are juxtaposed with video from the debate of Biden laughing.

Aides said the president was clear-eyed about the need to have a better showing in the second meeting. After a listless first performance, Obama was focused on delivering more pointed and aggressive responses.

He was ensconced in hours of debate practice Sunday at Kingsmill Resort, a luxury vacation spot in Williamsburg, Va. The president was shuttling between a house on the campus where he is staying and the resort’s main building, where aides are set up for debate practice.

Aides said Obama and his team were both studying up on policy and holding mock debates, featuring Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., playing the role of Romney. Anita Dunn, a former Obama aide, was playing the role of debate moderator Candy Crowley.

For Obama, the challenge is to be more aggressive in combating his Republican rival during the town-hall-style debate, which often requires candidates to also show empathy with the questioner.

Campaign officials insisted they were more focused on substance over style.

“The question is not just which candidate connects with the questioner, but who has the better policies for the American people for the next four years,” Psaki said. “On that front the president has a great advantage.”

But Romney’s team claimed the advantage on Sunday, citing polls that suggest the race is essentially a tossup.

After attending church services Sunday morning, the Republican candidate devoted several hours to debate practice at a hotel near his suburban Boston home. Romney, who has been setting aside time for debate practice since June, was joined by his senior strategy team, including Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, who has been playing Obama.

“I think the wind is at Gov. Romney’s back and we’re clearly on momentum,” Gillespie said. “This is going to be a close race. I knew that when we were behind in the polls. I know it now when we’re ahead in the polls.”

Gillespie made his comments on Fox News Sunday; Gibbs appeared on CNN’s State of the Union.

Meanwhile, the father of Christopher Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya who was killed in the attack in Benghazi last month, said his son’s death shouldn’t be politicized in the presidential campaign.

“It would really be abhorrent to make this into a campaign issue,” Jan Stevens, 77, said in a telephone interview from his home in Loomis, Calif., as he prepares for a memorial service for his son next week.

The ambassador’s father, a lawyer, said politicians should await the findings of a formal investigation before making accusations or judgments.

“The security matters are being adequately investigated,” Stevens said. “We don’t pretend to be experts in security. It has to be objectively examined. That’s where it belongs. It does not belong in the campaign arena.” Stevens said he has been getting briefings from the State Department on the progress of the investigation.

The Obama administration’s response to the embassy attack has become a contentious election issue, with Romney criticizing the president for not providing adequate security to Americans in Libya.

A senior Republican senator on Sunday accused Obama’s aides of deliberately covering up the details of the Sept. 11 attack in Libya that killed Stevens and three other Americans so that voters wouldn’t question Obama’s handling of the war on terror.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said he believes the administration knew within 24 hours of the assault that it was a coordinated militia attack and was not tied to other anti-U.S. protests across the Middle East. According to Graham, the administration suggested otherwise so voters wouldn’t think al-Qaida remained a threat.

“They’re trying to sell a narrative, quite frankly, that [the] wars are receding and that al-Qaida has been dismantled,” said Graham, a member of the Senate Armed Services subcommittee on emerging threats and capabilities, in an interview on CBS’ Face the Nation.

U.S. intelligence officials say they are investigating whether the Libyan militia group suspected of carrying out the assault, Ansar al-Sharia, has operational ties to al-Qaida.

At a hearing on Oct. 11, Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee also challenged the U.S. State Department’s version of events.

Rep. Darryl Issa, the California Republican who is chairman of the committee, said on the CBS show that the Libya attack was Obama’s “mission-accomplished moment,” a reference to when President George W. Bush was criticized for prematurely declaring victory in Iraq.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, the top Democrat on the committee, said Issa and the Republicans were reaching conclusions before the investigation was complete.

Republicans are making allegations “based on a campaign schedule,” Maryland’s Cummings said. “I don’t think our men who were killed deserve this.” Information for this article was contributed by Steve Peoples, Julie Pace and Anne Flaherty ofThe Associated Press; and by Gopal Ratname, Margaret Talev, Lisa Lerer, Julianna Goldman, John Walcott, Tom Schoenberg, Laurence Arnold and Christopher Stephen of Bloomberg News.

Front Section, Pages 1 on 10/15/2012

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