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Ill. town tries longshot Romney plea to save jobs

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Since early 2011, Cheryl Randecker and her co-workers have known their jobs making electronic sensors at a factory in Freeport, Ill., would be lost to China. Some even were asked to train their replacements, who were flown in from overseas.

But with the presidential election campaign in full swing, workers at the Sensata Technologies plant came up with a novel idea, a Hail Mary pass to save their jobs: Ask Mitt Romney for help.

Sensata is owned by Bain Capital, the private equity investment firm that the Republican presidential candidate once led and that has been the subject of a campaign debate about jobs and outsourcing. Romney had long since left his leadership position at Bain when Sensata bought the plant in 2010, but the Freeport City Council recently passed a unanimous 8-0 resolution calling on him to come visit and help keep the jobs in town. The workers have written him directly.

They've tried to get President Barack Obama involved, too. The mayor, a Democrat, invited both presidential contenders to come to Freeport to debate at the site where Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas tangled in 1858.

People in Freeport, where the high school mascot nickname — Pretzels — alludes to the town's long history of manufacturing, know their attempt to thrust themselves into the presidential campaign is a long shot at best: Neither the Romney camp nor the White House has responded.

But they've been noticed by members of Congress and the national media, and workers who've given up any hope that their jobs will be saved say that at least they're being heard by public officials and others in power.

"I always sat back. You watch the news and think, 'God, I wish I just had interactive TV and could just say what I want to say to them,' " the 52-year-old Randecker said, conceding that the plant almost certainly will close. "This has actually given a lot of people a voice."

Romney's campaign did not respond to a request for comment. But Sensata's spokeswoman, Linda Megathlin, said the company bought the plant from Minneapolis-based Honeywell essentially to get its customers. Most of the plant's revenues are generated in Asia, leading logically to the decision to move to China, she said.

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