President Barack Obama greets people as he arrives at John F. Kennedy International Airport, Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012, in New York, en rout to Hempstead, N.Y. and a presidential debate. |
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) -- President Barack Obama sought a steadier showing, while Republican challenger Mitt Romney strove for further political gains in their second of three campaign debates Tuesday night, a nationally televised town hall-style encounter exactly three weeks before Election Day.
Both men rehearsed extensively for the
90-minute encounter, a turnabout for Obama, whose low-energy performance
in the first debate nearly two weeks ago sent a shudder through the
ranks of his partisans and helped spark a rise in the polls for his
rival.
"I had a bad night," the president
conceded, days after he and Romney shared a stage for the first time, in
Denver. His aides made it known he didn't intend to be as deferential
to his challenger this time, and the presidential party decamped for a
resort in Williamsburg, Va., for rehearsals that consumed the better
part of three days.
Romney rehearsed in Massachusetts and again after arriving on Long Island on debate day, with less to make up for.
"The
first debate was huge and we've seen our numbers move all across the
country," his wife, Ann, said before joining her husband in New York.
In a campaign filled with controversy, even the evening's ground rules sparked one.
Candy
Crowley of CNN, the moderator, said she expected to be following up at
times on questions from the audience. A formal memorandum drafted by the
two campaigns said her role would be more limited, but she and the
evening's sponsor, the Commission on Presidential Debates said they
weren't party to it.
The questions were from
about 80 undecided voters inside the hall in a deeply Democratic state.
But the audience that mattered most watched on television and was
counted in the tens of millions. Crucially important: viewers in the
nine battlegrounds where the race is likely to be settled.
The
topics ranged widely, unlike the first debate, which covered the
economy and domestic issues. The final one, next Monday in Florida, will
be devoted to foreign policy.
Opinion polls
made the race a close one, with Obama leading in some national surveys
and Romney in others. Despite the Republican's clear gains in surveys in
recent days, the president led in several polls of Wisconsin and Ohio,
two key Midwestern battlegrounds where Romney and running mate Paul Ryan
are campaigning heavily.
Barring a
last-minute shift in the campaign, Obama is on course to win states and
the District of Columbia that account for 237 of the 270 electoral votes
needed for victory. The same is true for Romney in states with 191
electoral votes.
The remaining 110 electoral
votes are divided among the hotly contested battleground states of
Florida (29), North Carolina (15), Virginia (13) New Hampshire (4), Iowa
(6), Colorado (9), Nevada (6), Ohio (18) and Wisconsin (10).
In
a possible preview of his debate strategy, Obama has campaigned in the
past several days by accusing Romney of running away from some of the
conservative positions he took for tax cuts and against abortion earlier
in the year when he was trying to win the Republican nomination.
"Maybe
you're wondering what to believe about Mitt Romney," says one ad,
designed to remind voters of the Republican's strong opposition to
abortion except in cases of rape, incest or when the life of the mother
is at stake.
Romney countered by stressing
both in person and through his television advertising the slow pace of
the economic recovery, which has left growth sluggish and unemployment
high throughout Obama's term. Joblessness recently declined to 7.8
percent, dropping below 8 percent for the first time since the president
took office.
Romney also has stepped up his
criticism of the administration's handling of the terrorist attack
against the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, more than a month ago
that resulted in the death of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three
other Americans.
So far, the Republican
challenger has not aired any television advertising on the issue, a
suggestion that strategists believe it dims in importance next to the
economy.
But the attack sparked one of the
sharpest exchanges in last week's vice presidential debate, when Ryan
cited it in asserting that the administration's foreign policy was
unraveling and Vice President Joe Biden accused his rival of uttering "a
bunch of malarkey."
Biden also said that "we"
had not been aware of a request for additional security at the
facility, a statement that the White House later said applied to the
president and vice president.
Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday she accepted responsibility
for the level of security assigned to the consulate.