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On Sunday, Obama is scheduled to launch a lucrative and celebrity-packed fundraising swing to Los Angeles and San Francisco, a two-day trek followed by a campaign rally in ever-important Ohio on Tuesday. Obama and his surrogates plan to hammer Romney on two fronts: contending that Romney lied about his positions during the debate and criticizing him as downplaying Friday's positive jobs reports. Obama advisers have long believed that Republicans risked appearing as though they were rooting against the economy for political gain. The argument over the state of jobs comes after a Pew Research Center survey in September found only two issues rated as "very important" for more than 80 percent of voters: 87 percent rated the economy that way and 83 percent placed jobs in that category. The unexpected uptick in employment could be a major benefit to Obama. A recent Associated Press-GfK poll found that the vast majority of voters already have settled on a candidate, but 17 percent of likely voters are considered persuadable
-- either because they're undecided or showing soft support for Obama or Romney. Roughly 56 percent of persuadables approve of the way Obama is handling his job as president, but fewer, 47 percent, approve of his handling of the economy. Romney argued Friday that the change in the unemployment rate was nothing to celebrate given the millions of people in part-time jobs, those seeking better jobs and those who remain out of work. "This is not what a real recovery looks like," Romney said shortly after the Labor Department released its report. "We created fewer jobs in September than in August, and fewer jobs in August than in July, and we've lost over 600,000 manufacturing jobs since President Obama took office." By evening Romney wasn't talking about the jobs report and returned to relishing his good reviews from the debate more than 67 million people watched on TV. He told more than 5,000 people at the rally in St. Petersburg: "I enjoyed that debate a couple nights ago. That was a great experience."
[Associated
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