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Battleground state blitz continues for Obama, Romney

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(MCT) — CINCINNATI, Ohio — In battleground states across the country, President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney pressed voters to their sides on Thursday, with the incumbent arguing that he was the candidate voters could trust and the challenger insisting that he represented needed change.

With Election Day less than two weeks away, their campaigning crackled with urgency. Obama continued on a non-stop two-day tour of several battleground states, moving from Nevada overnight to Florida in the morning, and later to Virginia, Illinois — where he voted — and on to Ohio. Romney spent the day in that state, chief among those in the candidates’ sights as Nov. 6 nears.

At a morning rally in Ybor City, Fla., Obama, his voice already hoarse, delivered a direct pitch to women voters. As he urged the 8,500 supporters gathered at fairground to head to the polls, he told them electing a president was about trust.

“When you elect a president, you’re counting on someone you can trust to fight for you, who you can trust to do what they say they’re going to do, who you can trust to make sure that when something unexpected happens he or she is going to be thinking about your family, your future,” Obama said. “Trust matters.”

Obama arrived at the Tampa airport in the dark from his red-eye flight from Las Vegas, where he drew 13,000 people to a late-night rally. (Obama was helped by pop singer Katy Perry, who warmed up the crowd before the speech by performing in a mini-dress designed to look like a ballot.)

For both sides, the frantic campaign blitz is aimed at pushing voters to the polls early. At each stop, Obama has brought a blunt, boiled-down assessment of his GOP rival: Romney is not to be trusted. The president ticked through his promises from 2008 and declared each fulfilled.

Obama continued building on his riff knocking Romney for rhetorically moving to the center late in the campaign, claiming the GOP rival must have a come down with a condition.

“Romnesia!” the crowd jumped in unprompted, adopting the president’s mocking critique.

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