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"I don't think that will go down in history as very important," said Stuart Stevens of possible missteps. Nor is it likely that Romney will suffer politically from any clash with the news media, nor suffer damage among Jewish voters for comparing Israelis favorably with the Palestinians. While Obama's aides and campaign staff missed no chance to pan Romney's performance, it remains unclear whether the former Massachusetts governor achieved his goal of demonstrating to the public an ability to stride confidently across the world stage. Of evident concern is polling indicating that while the voting public generally believes Romney has better economic policies than Obama, it views the president in more favorable terms personally. In an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll completed on July 22, some 49 percent of registered voters said they had positive feelings toward Obama while 35 percent said the same about Romney. In the same survey, 43 percent of registered voters said Romney would be better at dealing with the economy, while 37 percent said Obama would. The new Republican ad was a joint venture of the Romney campaign and the Republican National Committee "We believe in our future, we believe in ourselves, we believe the greatest days in America are ahead," Romney says as American flags flutter. With the race near deadlock for months, ad spending was soaring in battleground states and non-existent in others. The Obama campaign also unveiled a new commercial during the day, part of what detailed advertising records show is a heavy investment in the range of $30 million during August. The spot focused on taxes and the deficit, arguing that Romney's approach would provide a "new $250,000 tax cut for millionaires" along with increased military spending that would add "trillions to the deficit." In the ad, airing in six closely contested battleground states, Obama touts a deficit reduction plan in which "millionaires pay a little more." Looking into the camera, Obama said in the tag line that "to cut the deficit we need everyone to pay their fair share." In the Fox interview, Romney suggested the news media were to blame for the culture controversy, saying some will "try to find anything else to divert from the fact that these last four years have been tough years for our country." There were other uneven moments on what Romney and his aides had planned as an illustration of his ability to handle the world stage. In London, he drew a tart response from Prime Minister David Cameron after wondering aloud whether the British had adequately prepared for the Olympic Games now under way. And in a speech in Jerusalem he declared that the city is the capital of Israel, even though the U.S. has its embassy in Tel Aviv and maintains a policy that the city's designation is a matter for negotiations between the Jewish state and Palestinians. Not surprisingly, he got nothing but criticism from the president's surrogates. Robert Gibbs, a senior campaign adviser, called the trip "an embarrassing disaster" for Romney. "He both offended our closest ally and triggered a troubling reaction in the most sensitive region of the world. He certainly didn't prove to anyone that he passed the commander-in-chief test," Gibbs said.
[Associated
Press;
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