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First debate sets up moment of high-risk theater

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Romney tried to address accusations that he doesn't care about those voters with a new ad Wednesday in which the casually dressed candidate looks at the camera and acknowledges the struggles of Americans living paycheck to paycheck. "We should measure our compassion by how many of our fellow Americans are able to get good-paying jobs, not how many are on welfare. My economic plan will get America back to work and strengthen the middle class," he says.

Former President Bill Clinton told a rally at the University of New Hampshire in Durham on Wednesday that many of those who don't pay federal income taxes are working families that both parties have agreed should not have to raise their children in poverty. He said the criticism of Americans who don't pay federal income taxes is ironic coming from a man who holds accounts in the Cayman Islands.

"You've got to give him credit," Clinton said. "When you bust somebody for doing what you did, it takes a lot of gall, you know?"

Republicans tried to frame the economic debate in their terms by pointing to the vice president's comments in North Carolina about the beleaguered middle class as an unwitting acknowledgment that Obama's economic policies have devastated average Americans.

"Over the last four years the American middle class has been buried," Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said to laughter and cheers before several hundred supporters in Denver. "Those aren't my words. Those happen to be the words of the distinguished vice president of the united states, Joe Biden."

Obama's camp countered that it was the policies of the president's Republican predecessors that had caused the damage.

Biden, at a later campaign event Tuesday, was careful to say that "the middle class was buried by the policies that Romney and Ryan supported," calling their economic plans an amped-up rework of those from the George W. Bush years.

Romney calls Wednesday's debate the beginning of a monthlong "conversation with the American people," and the debates do tend to consume much of the political oxygen for several crucial weeks.

The candidates will be speaking to a TV audience of tens of millions in one of those rare moments when a critical mass of Americans collectively fix their attention on one event. Fifty-two million people tuned in to the first debate four years ago, and 80 percent of the nation's adults reported watching at least a bit of the debates between Obama and Republican John McCain in 2008.

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

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