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Romney opens up on campaign trail

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Earlier in the day, as they traveled aboard the campaign bus in Florida, Romney told his chief strategist, Stuart Stevens, he was ready to get personal. He was feeling confident coming off his performance in the debate and was reunited here with Ann after a couple days apart. Ann, in her brief remarks here introducing Mitt, seemed to signal what was to come.

"I was so thrilled at the debate for people to see my husband unfiltered, without any negative ads, without any media trying to interpret what he says and what he feels in his heart," she said. "This is a man who cares about the American people. I've seen him throughout his life exhibit extraordinary compassion for others."

Then, a little over 10 minutes into the candidate's stump speech, Stevens told a reporter to listen carefully — that Romney's next riff would be new and worth hearing.

Romney talked about his graduate school classmate Billy, who started a successful business but got in an accident and became quadriplegic. After the accident, Romney said, Billy devoted himself to spinal injury research. A few weeks ago, he came to one of Romney's campaign events, in Atlanta.

"It's not easy for Billy to get around quadriplegic. . . . He can't move, of course, his arms and his legs, and he can barely speak, and they brought him forward, a big crowd around him, very hot," Romney said. "I reached down and I put my hand on Billy's shoulder and I whispered into his ear. I said, 'Billy, God bless you. I love ya.' And he whispered right back to me — and I couldn't quite hear what he said. He tried to speak loud enough for me to hear. He died the next day."

Romney said he saw the same kind of spirit in a young boy, David Oparowski, a regular parishioner in the Boston-area Mormon church where Romney served as a volunteer bishop.

David's parents, Ted, a retired firefighter, and Pat, spoke emotionally at the Republican National Convention in August about how Romney tended to their son when he contracted leukemia at age 14, and how he later delivered his eulogy. "David's story is part of Mitt's story," Ted Oparowski said.


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