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Aides said Ryan planned to use a teleprompter for the speech, a rare prop for a candidate who can tick through budget policy details with little prodding. The formal address, titled "Restoring America's Promise of Upward Mobility," is one of the few speeches Ryan has offered since joining the GOP ticket. The congressman from Wisconsin has preferred instead to use his person-to-personal campaign skills to connect with voters in a way partner Romney seems to struggle with. Ryan also was ready to introduce Romney's tenure as a stake president
-- the Mormon equivalent of a bishop among Catholics -- to his audience. Romney has been reluctant to make his Mormon faith a centerpiece of his own pitch, but those close to Romney often speak of the hours he spent administering his fellow members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
-- both internationally and in his hometown, Belmont, Mass. -- and the generosity he offered his neighbors. "As for Mitt Romney, he not only understands the importance of community; he's lived it," said Ryan, who planned to meet with civic leaders before his speech. "He's a guy who, at the height of a successful business, took the time to serve as a lay pastor for his church for 14 years, counseling people in Boston's inner-city neighborhoods, especially when they lost a job. He's a man who could easily have contented himself with giving donations to needy causes, but everyone who knows him will tell you that Mitt has always given his time and attention to those around him who are hurting." If elected, Romney would be the nation's first Mormon president.
[Associated
Press;
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