Political Hotsheet
By

Sarah Huisenga /

CBS News/ September 25, 2012, 10:33 PM

For Romney, it's all in in Ohio

Tough fight for Romney in Ohio

Mitt Romney, right, and Paul Ryan, campaigning in Ohio

/ CBS News

(CBS News) VANDALIA, Ohio - Trailing President Obama in some polls by as much as 8 percentage points in this pivotal battleground state, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and running mate Paul Ryan are pulling out all the stops on a two-day, five-city bus tour in hopes of making up important political ground.

Romney flew to western Ohio after spending the morning talking foreign policy and education in New York City. There, he was joined by Ryan, who had begun the day with a morning stop in Cincinnati. Both projected confidence to a crowd of more than 3,500 people who waited at the Dayton airport for hours to see the candidates.

"We are going to win Ohio," Ryan told the crowd.

"If I'm president of the United States," Romney started to say, and then corrected himself as the crowd yelled in protest: "When I'm president of the United States ..."

Romney, who has called for across-the-board cuts in the federal income tax, said President Obama will spend a second term raising taxes. "He's got one new, one new idea," Romney said. "I admit this, he has one thing he did not do in his first four years (that) he said he's going to do in the next four years, which is to raise taxes."

Complete coverage: Election 2012

In a nod to a manufacturing state that saw a steep decline in production during the recent recession, Romney promised to crack down on China for manipulating its currency, which he said is driving down the prices of its goods and destroying U.S. factory jobs. He also called out China for what he called routine theft of the intellectual property of American companies.

"We cannot compete with people who don't play fair and I won't let that go on," he said. "I will stop it in its tracks."

Standing alongside the two candidates on the stage was tea party hero Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, a one-time leading contender for the vice presidential slot. Portman urged the crowd to take advantage of early voting in the state, which begins Oct. 2.

"The best thing we can do right now is bank votes," Portman said, noting that absentee ballots were being passed out at the event. "So vote absentee, take advantage of it and be sure you're getting the word out. ... Tell them we need their vote and we need it now."

Meanwhile, Romney campaign advisers downplayed the relevance of the Washington Post poll, the latest in a series that show Romney behind in Ohio.

"You take all these polls on average, and we still believe that it's a margin-of-error race," senior adviser Kevin Madden told reporters following the first stop of the bus tour.

Political Director Rich Beeson suggested that the campaign's own internal polling shows a much closer race. "The public polls are what the public polls are," he said. "I kinda hope the Obama campaign is basing their campaign on what the public polls say. We don't. We have confidence in our data and our metrics."

The Romney campaign has been struggling to match the Obama campaigns ground game in Ohio, which includes 100 field offices staffed by volunteers compared to 40 field offices opened by the Republican challenger. But Beeson said a more important measure of success on the ground is not in the number of offices, but in the quality and number of contacts with voters. The Romney campaign is well on its way toward hitting its goal of knocking on 10 million doors in target states before Election Day, he said.

"They have 100 offices and I think they're making the mistake of mistaking action for progress," Beeson told reporters aboard the flight to Ohio. "Again, they're the reigning champs. They won. But I will put our operation up against anybody's."

Obama campaign spokeswoman Lis Smith said in response to Romney's comments on Tuesday: "Just a few years ago, Romney said that the president's decision to stand up to China on behalf of American workers in the tire industry was 'protectionism' and 'decidedly bad for the nation and our workers.' In the private sector, he invested in companies that shipped American jobs to China. And we now know that, for years, Mitt Romney has invested in Chinese companies and profited off of their success. When it comes to China, Mitt Romney isn't a trade warrior, he's a paper tiger."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
28 Comments Add a Comment
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lesserof2evil says:
Laughing on the outside, but crying uncontrollably on the inside.
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merlgrey says:
ryan is outperforming mitt in the fake crazy laugh category, he throws his neck into it.
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RollotheNorman says:
"(CBS News) VANDALIA, Ohio - Trailing President Obama in some polls by as much as 8 percentage points in this pivotal battleground state, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and running mate Paul Ryan are pulling out all the stops on a two-day, five-city bus tour in hopes of making up important political ground."

Sad but true, the newest NBC poll has Willard/Ryan down 10 full percentage points in Ohio. And now Willard/Ryan are doing a vigorous tour that will alienate even more Ohioans. Way to go Willard.
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zenia5 says:
It's wonderful that Robme Robot and Lyin "Eddie Munster" Ryan chose the great state of Ohio to drive their clown car off the cliff.
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marychgo says:
I'm trying to imagine in what alternative universe the good voters of Ohio would vote for the Spoiled Fratboy ticket....
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tvwatcher5345 says:
God Bless the republicans!, they re-elected bush, which resulted in the election of the antiwar candidate, obama,(who got two liberal justices on the supreme court) and now he will get re-elected, and hillary will be elected after him (republican women will even vote for her (thank you akin)probably 12 years before the republicans will get another chance at the whitehouse, and to see the gnashing of teeth on the republican side is icing on the cake, along with the fact they will still have to come out on nov 6th and have to vote for a (moderate)mormon and a roman catholic, not to mention that the dems will also keep control of the senate (with the independents), i'm watching FOX on election night, i have the following wednesday off and am ordering chinese food, God Bless you republicans ... republicans, you should read the first part of psalm 52
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lesserof2evil replies:
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funny, watching American election and eating CHINESE food.
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Pen_name says:
I'm confused how does the US president "crack down on China for manipulating its currency." I completely agree with what is going on there, but is he proposing we invade China?

What other options are there (that actually accomplish something beyond yelling "bad China"). Oh and you guys are political cats, shoot me a link to such info (how it would be enforced, etc).
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notreich says:
When you take all these polls on average it's not a margin-of-error race in Ohio. So naturally, "You take all these polls on average, and we still believe that it's a margin-of-error race," (Romney) senior adviser Kevin Madden told reporters. Republicans are big on just stating the opposite of the truth, it's their best and biggest move, actually.
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nearl451 says:
Ohio matters in this election only in "Fantasia".

Mitt is killing his own chances by attacking large sectors of American Society daily.
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RollotheNorman replies:
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Ohio doesn't matter nearly so much for Obama as it does for Willard. No RepubliCON has ever won the WH while losing Ohio. Bye, Willard, we hardly knew ye, and we're happy about that.
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cgar99 says:
Romney is going down for the count on Nov. 6. You'll soon see that I'm right.
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