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Obama, Romney return to political arena after Sandy hiatus

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(MCT) — The afterglow of post-Sandy bipartisanship lingered briefly in the air of the presidential campaign Thursday, then vaporized as President Barack Obama and his challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, threw themselves back into the political fray for a final push before Tuesday’s election.

Obama began the day by suggesting that the spirit of cooperation that emerged after the storm battered the East Coast might serve as a template for how the nation can be governed over the next four years. Speaking to a crowd in Green Bay, Obama praised the “leaders of different parties working to fix what’s broken.”

“There are no Democrats or Republicans during a storm,” Obama said. “There are just fellow Americans.”

The words seemed clearly to refer to New Jersey’s Republican governor, Chris Christie, with whom the president forged an unexpectedly friendly working relationship after the storm. They also harkened back to the speech that a relatively unknown Barack Obama delivered to the 2004 Democratic Convention, in which he talked about how there is no red or blue America, just “the United States of America.”

And they came on a day in which Obama was endorsed by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Democrat turned Republican who most recently ran for office as an independent.

But the bipartisanship didn’t last long.

As the day rolled on, Romney went hard after Obama, Obama returned fire, and both sides released new television commercials that offered new lines of attack against the other.

Speaking in Roanoke, Va., Romney criticized Obama’s proposal to create a Cabinet-level position to oversee business, saying it reflects the president’s lack of understanding of how to create jobs and rekindle the economy.

“I don’t think adding a new chair in his Cabinet will help add millions of jobs on main street,” the GOP nominee told supporters gathered in a window factory. “We don’t need a Secretary of Business to understand business — we need a president who understands business, and I do.”

Romney was referring to a comment Obama made Monday that he would like to create a Secretary of Business to consolidate various federal government branches.

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