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Romney makes one last pitch for Pennsylvania

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(MCT) — MORRISVILLE, Pa. — Trying to quilt together a patchwork of states that would give him the White House, Mitt Romney ricocheted around the country Sunday, arguing that he represented true change and that re-electing President Barack Obama would mean continuing chronic unemployment, high energy prices and increased dependence on government.

Romney said Obama had promised much but has fallen “so very short.”

“Talk is cheap, but a record is real and it’s measured in achievements,” the Republican nominee said at a rally in a farm field. “The president thinks big government is the answer. No, Mr. President, more good jobs, that’s the answer.”

At that, tens of thousands of people who had gathered for the rally began chanting: “Send him home!”

The Romney appearance in the suburb of Philadelphia was his first in Pennsylvania since September, when he visited a military college. His wife, Ann, and his running mate, Rep. Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., have appeared here more recently. Ryan visited on on Saturday.

Campaign officials hoped that Romney’s appearance, and Republicans’ recent ad spending, would turn a state that Obama handily won in 2008.

Aside from one poll that shows the race tied, all other recent surveys show Obama comfortably holding on to Pennsylvania. But a win for Romney would offset a loss in Ohio — where Obama has held onto a steady, if extremely narrow, lead in polls — or losses in a collection of less-populated states such as Wisconsin, Nevada and Iowa.

Though Romney has largely ignored Pennsylvania in recent months, his spokesman argued that his visit less than 48 hours before Election Day was perfectly timed because the state did not have early voting.

“It’s a remarkable juxtaposition here that Mitt Romney will be in the suburbs of Philadelphia today and, you know, four years ago, Barack Obama was in Indiana,” senior adviser Ed Gillespie said on ABC’s “This Week”, referring to the Republican-dominated state that Obama won in 2008. “When you look at where this map has gone, it reflects the change and the direction and the momentum toward Gov. Romney. ... The map has expanded.”

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