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Romney broadens message

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The president is "leading from behind and reacting to events in the Middle East and North Africa, rather than shaping them," Madden said. "Governor Romney will lay out a stronger vision for American foreign policy, based on the strong leadership that we need to shape events and protect American interests."

Romney is ready for debate questions about his branding of 47 percent of Americans as government-dependent "victims" who pay no income tax and won't vote for him, Gillespie said.

"We believe the voters will see and appreciate the fact that what Governor Romney's talking about would improve the quality of life for 100 percent of Americans," Gillespie said.

Romney and Obama, after debating Wednesday in Colorado at the University of Denver, will face off on Oct. 16 at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, and on Oct. 22 at Lynn University in Boca Raton, Florida. Each debate begins at 9 p.m. Washington time.

The recalibration of Romney's campaign has intensified since the secretly recorded May remarks were published last month.

"Romney, like most nominees, has attempted to retarget his message toward the political center, and that has accelerated ever since the '47 percent' comments surfaced," said Dan Schnur, who worked on Arizona Sen. John McCain's 2000 Republican presidential bid and directs the Jesse Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of Southern California.

While Obama, who faced no primary opposition, has had all year to move to the middle, Romney "has five weeks and three debates to talk to the center of the electorate," Schnur said.

Romney is also altering his tone on another issue on which polling shows him to be out of step with public opinion. A Bloomberg National poll conducted Sept. 21-24 found that only about a third believe the 2010 health-care law Obama pressed to enactment should be repealed, as Romney promised during the Republican primaries, while a majority said it should be retained. Two in five said the measure "may need small modifications," and another one in five said it should be "left alone."

While Romney often says in interviews and campaign appearances that he will repeal the law, he has recently begun speaking more about parts of it he would keep and mentioning the Massachusetts measure that mirrors its approach and that, as the state's governor, he helped enact in 2006.


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