WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney make a frenetic dash to a series of crucial swing states on Monday, delivering their final arguments to voters on the last day of an extraordinarily close race for the White House.
After a long, bitter and expensive campaign, national polls show Obama and Romney
are essentially deadlocked ahead of Tuesday's election, although Obama
has a slight advantage in the eight or nine battleground states that
will decide the winner.
Obama plans to
visit three of those swing states on Monday and Romney will travel to
four to plead for support in a fierce White House campaign that focused primarily on the lagging economy but at times turned intensely personal.
The election's outcome will impact a variety of
domestic and foreign policy issues, from the looming "fiscal cliff" of
spending cuts and tax increases that could kick in at the end of the
year to questions about how to handle illegal immigration or the thorny
challenge of Iran's nuclear ambitions.
The balance of power in Congress also will be at stake
on Tuesday, with Obama's Democrats now expected to narrowly hold their
Senate majority and Romney's Republicans favored to retain control of
the House of Representatives.
In a race where the two candidates and their party
allies raised a combined $2 billion, the most in U.S. history, both
sides have pounded the heavily contested battleground states with an
unprecedented barrage of ads.
The close margins in state and national polls suggested
the possibility of a cliffhanger that could be decided by which side
has the best turnout operation and gets its voters to the polls.
In the final days, both Obama and Romney focused on
firing up core supporters and wooing the last few undecided voters in
battleground states.
Romney reached out to dissatisfied Obama supporters
from 2008, calling himself the candidate of change and ridiculing
Obama's failure to live up to his campaign promises. "He promised to do
so very much but frankly he fell so very short," Romney said at a rally
in Cleveland, Ohio, on Sunday.
Obama, citing improving economic reports on the pace of
hiring, argued in the final stretch that he has made progress in
turning around the economy but needed a second White House term to
finish the job. "This is a choice between two different versions of
America," Obama said in Cincinnati, Ohio.
FINAL SWING-STATE BLITZES
Obama will close his campaign on Monday with a final
blitz across Wisconsin, Ohio and Iowa - three Midwestern states that,
barring surprises elsewhere, would be enough to get him more than the
270 electoral votes needed for victory.
Polls show Obama has slim leads in all three. His final
stop on Monday night will be in Iowa, the state that propelled him on
the path to the White House in 2008 with a victory in its first-in-the
nation caucus.
Romney will visit his must-win states of Florida and
Virginia - where polls show he is slightly ahead or tied - along with
Ohio before concluding in New Hampshire, where he launched his
presidential run last year.
The only state scheduled to get a last-day visit from
both candidates is Ohio, the most critical of the remaining
battlegrounds - particularly for Romney.
The former Massachusetts governor has few paths to
victory if he cannot win in Ohio, where Obama has kept a small but
steady lead in polls for months.
Obama has been buoyed in Ohio by his support for a
federal bailout of the auto industry, where one in every eight jobs is
tied to car manufacturing, and by a strong state economy with an
unemployment rate lower than the 7.9 percent national rate.
That has undercut Romney's frequent criticism of
Obama's economic leadership, which has focused on the persistently high
jobless rate and what Romney calls Obama's big spending efforts to
expand government power.
Romney, who would be the first Mormon president, has
centered his campaign pitch on his own experience as a business leader
at a private equity fund and said it made him uniquely suited to create
jobs.
Obama's campaign fired back with ads criticizing
Romney's experience and portraying the multimillionaire as out of touch
with everyday Americans.
Obama and allies said Romney's firm, Bain Capital,
plundered companies and eliminated jobs to maximize profits. They also
made an issue of Romney's refusal to release more than two years of
personal tax returns.