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Romney re-energized, Obama feeling urgency

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Romney aides made clear Tuesday they will not rest in a race that has swung back and forth.

"This is a campaign that has never gotten too high when things are good and too low when things are bad,'' said Kevin Madden, a senior Romney adviser. "The governor, in particular, remains very focused on the task at hand, which is making sure he talks directly to those voters who haven't made up their mind yet.. . . I think if he continues to do that, we're going to be well positioned in this race.''

Romney's bounce in the polls confirms some things that the campaign's research was showing even before the debate — chiefly, that voters want to hear more directly from the candidate himself. That is why, for instance, the campaign has released its first television ads in which Romney speaks directly to the camera.

Campaign strategists are taking other steps, as well, to build on their momentum. They are retooling Romney's stump speech so it has fewer red-meat lines that aim to stir up conservative partisans who attend rallies and more points that are intended to appeal to persuadable voters who will be seeing and reading snippets from the speech in news coverage.

"We want to capitalize on what we saw in the debate, what worked in the debate — and it has the added benefit of being who he is," said Ed Gillespie, a former Republican National Committee chairman who has joined the campaign to bring more clarity to its message.

Other new measures include a revival of the tele-town halls in which the campaign robo-dials thousands of supporters in a swing state and Romney does a town hall meeting via conference call. Romney did such conference calls often during the Republican primaries and has very recently begun doing them again, including sessions with Virginia and Colorado voters in the past few days while he was in other states.

Romney is also emphasizing a recent campaign strategy to clearly spell out what he would do as president, as he did when he introduced his vision for a "vibrant rural America" at a campaign stop Tuesday outside Des Moines, Iowa.


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