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Bill Clinton, seeking to help Obama recover, campaigns in Nevada

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Obama has held a consistent, if narrow, lead in Nevada polls for months. But Romney’s gains in national polls since the debate suggest the race for Nevada’s six electoral votes may well have tightened.

Clinton’s approach was often comical at the outdoor rally at a Las Vegas nature preserve a few miles from the strip. He ridiculed Republicans for the reaction by some to Friday’s drop in the nation’s unemployment rate below 8 percent.

“I was kind of embarrassed for them, weren’t you?” Clinton asked. “Oh, they were whining and moaning, ‘It’s a grand conspiracy; oh, they cooked the numbers.’ ”

Ryan Erwin, a senior adviser to the Romney campaign in Nevada, responded to Clinton’s critique by recalling that the former president once described Romney’s business record as “sterling.” He also said Nevada’s ailing economy remained a major hindrance to Obama in Nevada.

“If you drive through any neighborhood in Nevada, south or north, you’re going to find vacant homes, or homes for sale on short sale,” he said.

Nevada’s 12.1 percent unemployment rate is the highest of any state. It peaked two years ago at 14 percent, then slid to 11.6 percent in June before spiking upward again.

Romney has another distinct advantage in Nevada: Widespread support among the state’s large Mormon population.

A wild card, though, will be libertarians who backed Ron Paul for the Republican nomination, said Michael Green, a history professor at the College of Southern Nevada. In Nevada, some of them could opt for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, cutting into Romney’s support.

“If the race is really tight, that might matter,” Green said.

For his part, Obama is favored overwhelmingly by Nevada’s growing ranks of Latinos. And the Culinary Workers Union, a major force for Democratic campaigns in Nevada, is backing him.

Clinton’s rally at the Springs Preserve was plugged in the local media for days. Among those in the crowd was Darlene Love Smith, 49, a Las Vegas bus driver on disability.

“I’ve always loved Clinton,” she said. “He’s down to earth, and he says things like he’s out for the people — and I believe that he is.”

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