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Obama strikes elevated themes in battleground states

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(MCT) — CONCORD, N.H. — Promising to champion the voiceless in Washington, President Barack Obama bounced from battleground to battleground on Sunday bringing an arsenal of famous friends to round up votes as the clock wound down on his re-election campaign.

With rallies in New Hampshire, Florida and Ohio, Obama entered the final 48 hours on the trail with a fresh vow to fight for the underrepresented and underprivileged. Grayed by the political battles of the past four years — “with the scars to prove it” — Obama said he would never surrender in the fight for the middle class.

“I’m here today because I’m not ready to give up on the fight,” Obama told a crowd in Concord. “I am not ready to give up on the fight, and I hope you aren’t either.”

Obama’s elevated themes are a long way from the snarky bite of his speeches just a couple of weeks ago, remarks that mocked Republican rival Mitt Romney as forgetting his past positions — “Romnesia” — or trying to blame Big Bird for the country’s fiscal woes. Then the president and his campaign team were trying to block a possible late-campaign Romney surge. Now, as he tries to wring every last Democratic vote out of contested territory, the president is trying to inspire voters by reminding them why so many backed him four years ago.

“Back in 2008, we talked about change we can believe in. But I also said this is hard — because I wasn’t just talking about changing presidents or changing parties,” Obama said in Hollywood, Fla. “I was talking about changing how politics is done in this country.”

Under a crisp blue sky in Concord, Obama was reaching back further, trying to remind some why they may have voted Democratic 20 years ago. For only the second time in the campaign, the president stumped with former President Bill Clinton, arguably the Democrat best able to carry the mantle of champion of the working class.

In remarks that ran longer than the candidate’s, Clinton vouched for the president on economic policy, foreign policy and bipartisanship — a direct appeal to independents.

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