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Obama says Romney would kill the middle class

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama told voters in Florida on Thursday that Republican challenger Mitt Romney wants to undo the structures of American society that built a vibrant middle class.

Romney, speaking in a Boston suburb, repeated his charge that Obama was more concerned with his re-election than bringing down the nation's high rate of unemployment.

The men battling to win the November election for the White House are engaging in the kind of intense campaigning normally reserved for the final weeks of the contest.

Obama's decision to spend two days in Florida signals the importance of the state. If the president can win there, as he did in 2008, Romney would have a difficult time blocking the president's return to the White House. The U.S. presidential elections are not won according to the popular vote nationally but in state-by-state contests.

Obama and Romney are in one of the closest presidential contests in recent memory. Incumbent presidents normally have an advantage, but Obama's has been diminished by voter concerns over the sluggish economic recovery and 8.2 percent unemployment.

The race promises to be even closer in Florida. The state provided the deciding margin in George W. Bush's victory in 2000, and it has been closely contested ever since. Obama aides said that since 1992, voters in the state have cast more than 32.5 million votes during the past five presidential elections, and only a total of 57,000 votes have separated the two parties in those campaigns.

Republicans are holding their national convention in Florida in August in hopes of giving themselves an edge in the state.

Obama was hitting hard on themes important to residents of Florida, a state heavily populated with retired Americans, military personnel and a middle class worried about the slow economic recovery and unemployment.

Obama said the basic bargain in the United States was "at risk like never before" because of Republican policies, those promoted by Romney who has a fortune estimated at a quarter billion dollars.

"No matter who you are, no matter where you come from, no matter what you look like, American has always been a place where you can make it if you work hard," Obama said.

Obama, speaking directly to retired Americans, hammered Romney for backing a plan that would overhaul Medicare, government health insurance for those over 65. He said those changes would end up costing retired people an additional $6,400 a year.

As Obama spoke in Florida, Romney appeared at a hastily arranged event in a suburb of Boston, headquarters for his campaign.

He repeated his charge of a day earlier that Obama was paying more attention to his re-election than to the need to return Americans to work.

"The job he's interested in protecting is his own," Romney said. "The job that should be protected is the job of men and women in this country who want to get jobs, who want to go back to work, who want to have rising incomes again."

He also kept up an attack his campaign has launched that claims that Obama believes that the government, not entrepreneurs, are responsible for the success of the business community.

"The president does, in fact, believe that people who build enterprises like this really aren't responsible for it," Romney said at Middlesex Truck & Coach.

The Obama remarks in question had been directed at the fact that all Americans, including entrepreneurs, benefit from infrastructure — things like roads — built by the government.

The campaign has been surprisingly combative in recent days.

Obama has repeatedly criticized the private equity firm Romney co-founded, Bain Capital, arguing that it promoted the outsourcing of jobs to countries like China and India. And Democrats want Romney to make public past tax returns, noting that the one year for which he has released returns showed investments and offshore accounts in Switzerland and the Cayman Islands.

Several Republicans have joined in the call for more transparency, including Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who challenged Romney for the party nomination earlier this year.

In an interview with ABC television broadcast Thursday, Romney's wife, Ann, said the couple would not release more records.

Speaking with an Ohio television station, Romney said one reason not to release more of his returns was that "the Democratic party and the opposition has all these people that comb through and try and find anything they can to distract from the issues people care about, oftentimes in a dishonest way."

His position may become increasingly untenable given that when his father George Romney made an unsuccessful run for the White House in 1968, he set a precedent of releasing tax returns covering 12 years.

Also on Thursday, Romney linked Obama's foreign policy to Russia's veto of a United Nations resolution calling for sanctions against the regime of Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

Romney said in a statement on his campaign website that although Obama has given concessions to Russia on missile defense and nuclear arms, the U.S. "has received little in return except obstruction and belligerence."

In recent days, Romney has tried to turn the discussion back to the top issue in the election, the economy, noting that Obama has not met with his jobs council in more than six months.

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