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Presidential race is close as ever

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“Last week was a reminder to the American people of who the president is fighting for,” said Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki. She cited “access to health care” and “immigration reform.”

“But we’re looking ahead, and we know this race is going to be really close,” she said.

Obama on Thursday starts a two-day bus tour of Ohio and western Pennsylvania, a trip that partly mimics Romney’s earlier and longer recent tour. The president might spend part of his drive time dialing for dollars. It’s a chore all candidates face, but it poses new urgency for the president, because pro-Romney “super PACs” are raising far more campaign money than are Democratic groups.

In a leaked recording of a conference call Obama recently placed from Air Force One to top donors from 2008, the president implored them to match their earlier generosity.

“We’re going to have to deal with these super PACs in a serious way,” Obama said, according to the Daily Beast.

Obama’s team may find some comfort in knowing that since April 10, pro-Romney forces have spent more money on TV ads in North Carolina – $6.4 million – than in any other state except Florida and Ohio. Four years ago, Obama narrowly won North Carolina, which had voted Republican in seven straight presidential races. Most plausible scenarios for a Romney presidency require him to secure the state, the sooner the better.

The two campaigns, including their allied super PACs, are matching each other nearly dollar for dollar on TV ads in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Virginia and New Hampshire. Romney’s forces are out-spending Obama’s in Iowa and Michigan. The opposite is true in Colorado.

Romney is vacationing this week in New Hampshire, where family games might mix with talk of who his running mate should be. Romney, whose oversight of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games won wide praise, plans to attend the Summer Games later this summer in London.

He also will go to Israel, a trip that could appeal to Jewish voters and donors, and to conservatives who see Israel as a vital military and political ally.

Meanwhile, Republicans worry that Democrats are making headway with claims that Romney supported shipping jobs overseas when he headed a corporate restructuring firm called Bain Capital. His campaign says Romney did not oversee the export of U.S. jobs, although Bain at times invested in companies that helped pioneer outsourcing certain jobs to places such as India.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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