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Candidates prep for first debate

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For all their positioning, both candidates will use the debates to try to surmount the same challenges that they long have confronted.

Romney, frequently criticized for shifting his positions to sync up with the politics of the moment, needs to project “a kind of character, a kind of maturity that allows him to be presidential,” says Fields.

Obama, an incumbent who’s shown himself to be comfortable in the media glare, “doesn’t have to prove that part,” says Fields. “He has to prove that he has real answers to problems that have not been solved in his first term and for which there is a great deal of unrest.”

Romney is sure to be questioned anew about his caught-on-video comment dismissing the 47 percent of Americans who don’t pay federal income tax as victims who won’t take responsibility for their lives.

“How can Gov. Romney have such a profound misunderstanding of the people of this country?” Biden asked during an appearance Saturday in Fort Myers, Fla., “When I hear this talk, not just from Romney and Ryan, but from this new Republican Party ... I don’t recognize the country they’re talking about.”

Former President Bill Clinton, offering a bit of unsolicited advice to the opposition, says Romney would be wise not to “double down on that 47 percent remark.”

“That will cause difficulties, because we now know that the overwhelming number of those people work and have children,” Clinton said recently. He added that the most important job for Romney is to “find a way to relate to more people in these debates and speak to more of them.”

Speaking in Derry, N.H., Saturday morning, vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan contrasted the economic stagnation he said will continue if Obama is re-elected with the prosperity he said he and Romney will create, saying the “Live Free or Die” state wants to “live free and prosper.”

On Saturday, the Obama campaign posted a Web video urging debate viewers take Romney’s claims of private-sector experience with a grain of salt. “Remember, it wasn’t about creating jobs,” the video says. It includes testimony from steel- and paper-plant workers laid off after Bain Capital takeovers.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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