Obama courts Florida voters

Obama courts Florida voters
Updated 10 September 2012
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Obama courts Florida voters

Obama courts Florida voters

ORLANDO, FLORIDA: US President Barack Obama wooed Florida voters yesterday after Republican Mitt Romney thrust religion to the center of the White House race as he sought to underscore the rivals’ different approach to traditional values.
Obama planned to meet with supporters in Melbourne and West Palm Beach as he pursued his strategy of winning over undecided voters in so-called battleground or swing states.
Florida, where the president spent his second day, is one of 12 such states, which don’t have a pronounced political preference and whose voters will likely determine the outcome of the Nov. 6 election.
Obama spoke Saturday in St Petersburg where he was introduced by Charlie Crist, the former Republican governor of the Sunshine State, who says he was driven from his party after losing a Senate primary to Tea Party-backed Marco Rubio in 2010.
“The values we are fighting for are not Democratic values, they are not Republican values, they are American values,” President Barack Obama said, as his campaign flexed organizational muscle and turned out 11,000 people in Orlando.
The president renewed his attack on Romney over what he calls “trickle-down” Republican economics that have demonstrably failed and would risk igniting a new financial crisis.
Meanwhile, Romney appeared with televangelist Pat Robertson in Virginia, and seized upon the row at last week’s Democratic convention sparked when delegates removed language about God from their platform.
After reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, Romney told the crowd: “I will not take God out of... our platform. I will not take God out of my heart. We are a nation that’s bestowed by God.”
Romney said Americans needed a new president who will “commit to a nation under God that recognizes that we, the American people, were given our rights not by government but by God himself.”
The former Massachusetts governor also appeared to imply that Democrats wanted to remove the phrase “In God We Trust” from US currency.
The Obama campaign swiftly responded to Romney’s rhetoric, describing it as a “Hail Mary” pass — a desperate long throw in the dying moments of an American football game when defeat is nigh.
Spokeswoman Lis Smith accused the Republican nominee of launching “extreme and untrue attacks against the president and associating with some of the most strident and divisive voices in the Republican Party.”
The Romney team shot back that it was Obama’s campaign, not Romney’s “that pits people against each other.”
The new ripple in the campaign comes amid signs of a polling bounce for Obama out of his convention last week, as he climbed a point into a 49-45 percent lead over Romney in Gallup’s daily tracking poll.
His approval rating as measured by Gallup held steady at 52 percent, its highest mark since he ordered the operation to kill Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in May 2011.
Republican campaigns have frequently used religious and cultural issues to drive up turnout in close elections, and now as a veiled attack on Obama, who has frequently felt compelled to point out that he is a practicing Christian.