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Jobs report shakes up presidential campaign

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He told an audience at George Mason University that his rival “got an extreme makeover” in their face-off.

He also argued Romney can’t bring change to the country when he’s “willing to write off half the nation before you take office,” a reference to Romney’s disparaging remarks about the 47 percent of Americans who don’t pay federal income taxes. Romney made the comments at a fundraiser in May that was secretly recorded, but the videotape did not emerge until last month. Romney went as far as he’s ever gone to try to take back his words in an interview Thursday night with Fox News.

“Well, clearly in a campaign, with hundreds if not thousands of speeches and question-and-answer sessions, now and then you’re going to say something that doesn’t come out right,” Romney said Thursday. “In this case, I said something that’s just completely wrong.”

At the White House, senior adviser David Plouffe retorted: “I would take with a huge grain of salt trying to clean something up five months after you said it for the first time.”

The next presidential debate is not until Oct. 16, a town hall-style meeting at Hofstra University in New York, giving both sides ample opportunities to blanket battleground states and raise money for the final weeks of television advertising.

Romney released three new ads on Friday, offering a window into his strategy for the coming week. One, called “Facts Are Clear,” focuses on the national debt and accuses Obama of wasting trillions of dollars instead of creating jobs. A second spot features Greg Anthony, a former professional basketball player from Nevada, talking about his roots in the state and his switch from backing Obama in 2008 to Romney this year.

The third spot is titled, simply, “Ohio Jobs.” It features Romney looking straight at the camera to talk to voters from the Midwestern battleground state seen as critical to his White House hopes. Obama also was campaigning in Ohio on Friday.

Romney planned a rally later in the day in St. Petersburg, Fla., kicking off a weekend of campaigning in that state, the largest of the prized battlegrounds. Obama was heading to California on Sunday for a fundraising spree that will include a concert in Los Angeles featuring Jon Bon Jovi, Katy Perry and Stevie Wonder.

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

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