THE RACE: Campaign is heating up as Obama and Romney take new swings at each other - Washington Post

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President Barack Obama’s campaign suggests Republican rival Mitt Romney may be a felon. Romney’s team calls the president a liar. Both candidates say the other shipped U.S. jobs overseas.
With over three months to go, campaign rhetoric already is close to the boiling point, and temperatures are still rising.

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Mitt Romney demanded President Barack Obama stop attacking his record at Bain Capital. In an interview with WAVY-TV Obama called Romney ‘Mr. Fix-It for the economy’ and said voters ‘want to know what is exactly his business experience.’

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Both candidates took new swipes at each other in television interviews broadcast Monday.
“What does it say about a president whose record is so poor that all he can do in this campaign is attack me?” Romney asked on Fox News. “When people have accused you of a crime, you have every reason to go after them pretty hard.”
Obama’s deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter suggested last week that Romney either committed “a felony” when he signed Securities and Exchange Commission documents for Bain Capital or lied when he denied working for the private-equity firm after 1999.
Romney says 1999 is when he left, even though SEC filings list him as sole owner and CEO through February 2001.
Obama defended his own more aggressive tone, telling CBS it’s because Romney differs so starkly from him on issues. “The more detailed we get into what he’s saying and what I’m saying, I think that serves the democratic process well,” the president said.
Romney disputes Obama’s claim that he outsourced jobs at Bain. “When a president doesn’t tell the truth,” says a narrator in a Romney ad, “how can we trust him to lead?”
Romney counters that Obama is the outsourcer, spending taxpayer stimulus money on work done in China and steering federal contracts and appointments toward top campaign contributors
Obama campaigned Monday in Cincinnati. Ohio is a critical swing state for both parties.
Romney raised funds in Louisiana and Mississippi with Louisiana Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal, a running-mate possibility.
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Follow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tomraum. For more AP political coverage, look for the 2012 Presidential Race in AP Mobile’s Big Stories section. Also follow https://twitter.com/APCampaign and AP journalists covering the campaign: https://twitter.com/AP/ap-campaign-2012
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EDITOR’S NOTE _ With 113 days left until Election Day, here are insights into today’s highlights in U.S. politics
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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