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Romney broadens message

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BOSTON — Mitt Romney, who a top aide predicted months ago would get an Etch A Sketch clean slate for the general election, is broadening his message and moderating his tone to reach out to swing voters in the run-up to the first in a series of presidential debates this month.

The Republican presidential nominee spent much of the year stressing his support of tax cuts for all, self-deportation of illegal immigrants and the undoing of President Barack Obama's health-care law. Now, he's highlighting a recast message as he seeks votes from middle-income earners, Hispanics, women and fence-sitters of all backgrounds.

Romney's campaign wants to sway undecided voters and those who back Obama yet harbor reservations about him.

"This is a very close race," Kevin Madden, a campaign adviser, told reporters on a conference call Monday, adding that the campaign would also be reaching out to "a number of voters out there that may be registering some measure of support" for Obama "that's very soft."

"The reason that these voters right now are undecided is that they've watched President Obama for the last four years, and they haven't concluded he's worthy of their support right now," Madden said. In the coming weeks, he added, the campaign will "lay out the important choice that these voters face on these big issues that they care about."

It's the culmination of a process that top Romney strategist Eric Fehrnstrom foreshadowed earlier this year as the former Massachusetts governor pushed to clinch his party's nomination. Fehrnstrom said in a March 21 CNN interview that Romney could reset the race in the fall, like the Etch A Sketch child's toy for making drawings and quickly erasing them with a shake.

Since then, Romney hasn't reversed any of his positions, as his Republican primary rivals and Democrats who branded him a "flip-flopper" said he would. Yet as he readies for the Wednesday debate against Obama, he's stressing elements of his agenda that might appeal to a broader swath of voters.

The tax-cut issue offers one example. Romney has campaigned since February on a proposal to reduce income-tax rates across the board by 20 percent, arguing that doing so would help create jobs by allowing employers to keep and invest more of what they earn. Lately, he has highlighted the benefits of the plan for middle-income people and emphasized that he isn't looking to hand more tax cuts to the wealthy.

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