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Obama promises supporters he is in it to win it

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On Tuesday, the Republican dismissed the ad as a distraction.

“These are tough times with real serious issues, so you have to scratch your head when the president spends the last week talking about saving Big Bird,” Romney told a crowd that gathered in a windswept field in Van Meter, Iowa. “I actually think we need to have a president who talks about saving the American people and saving good jobs and saving our future, and also saving the family farm.”

Another spot released Tuesday reinforced in a more serious way the Obama camp’s concerns about Romney’s new momentum. That ad, airing in swing states, links Romney to his running mate Rep. Paul Ryan’s proposal to cut back spending on Medicaid. The cuts would “burden families with the cost of nursing home care,” the ad said, picking up on a line of attack former President Bill Clinton stressed when he made the case for Obama at the Democratic National Convention.

The ad also indicated that the Obama campaign views Thursday’s vice presidential debate as an opportunity to get back on track.

Top campaign strategist David Axelrod, as long planned, has been presiding over practice sessions for Vice President Joe Biden at a hotel near his home in Delaware since last weekend. Senior White House counselor David Plouffe, the architect of Obama’s 2008 campaign, left the president’s side Monday to join them.

A Biden aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity to candidly reflect on strategy, said they view Ryan as being “in a box.” “He has been the face of Republican policies for years,” the aide said, making it potentially difficult for him to follow Romney’s lead in taking a more centrist position.

Obama himself will return to more intensive preparations for next Tuesday’s meeting, a town-hall format, this weekend in Williamsburg, Va.

Romney, too, is expected to more intensively prepare in coming days, but on Tuesday he was in Iowa and Ohio, both battleground states where he hoped for a lasting boost.

Speaking on a stage set with hay bales and bunting that was flanked by two huge tractors, Romney touted his plan to roll back regulations that he said have burdened family farms. He noted that he would permanently eliminate the estate tax—a popular issue here.

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