Conflicted Voters Consider Closing Arguments - East Idaho News
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Conflicted Voters Consider Closing Arguments

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154583974?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1351866778447JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) — Will Friday’s news that the economy added 171,000 new jobs, while the unemployment ticked up to 7.9 percent, matter all that much heading into Election Day — now just four short days off?

Voters appear divided about which of the presidential candidates would lead the country toward economic recovery. According to Thursday night’s ABC News/Washington Post tracking poll, 54 percent of likely voters expressed at least some confidence the economy would improve under Mitt Romney compared to 47 percent who said the same is President Obama wins re-election.

But as ABC pollster Gary Langer notes, “far fewer in either case are ‘very’ confident of economic gains — 19 percent if Romney wins, 21 percent if it’s Obama — hardly a rousing endorsement of either.”

What’s more: Only 36 percent of likely voters say the president is chiefly responsible for the country’s current economic troubles, and many more — 51 percent — instead blame President George W. Bush. As ABC News polls have indicated for weeks, the race could not be tighter: 49 percent of likely voters back Obama, while 48 percent support Romney.

On the campaign trail, Romney will deliver a speech that will lay out the closing arguments for his candidacy at Products Pavilion at State Fair Park in West Allis, Wis, on Friday. He previewed his message in a CNN.com Op-Ed:

“I am offering a contrast to what we are seeing in Washington today,” Romney wrote. “We’ve watched as one party has pushed through its agenda without compromising with the other party. We’ve watched gridlock and petty conflict dominate while the most important issues confronting the nation, like chronic high unemployment, go un-addressed. The bickering has to end. I will end it.”

President Obama also penned an Op-Ed for CNN.com laying out his vision for the next four years.

Meanwhile, President Obama focuses on Ohio, campaigning at three separate events in Hilliard, Springfield and Lima. In the northwest corner from Toledo to Lima, a swath of counties were split between Obama and McCain four years ago, as well as Franklin County where Obama won overwhelmingly in 2008.

“They’re scared,” a Romney campaign aide said of the political geography of Obama’s stops Friday. “They know they’re going to lose areas like coal country and they’re desperately trying to fix the problems that have been mounting in military areas.”

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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