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Obama seeks cash as Romney expresses confidence

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Obama continued his California visit Monday by declaring a national monument at the Keene home of Latino labor leader Cesar Chavez, the United Farmworkers Union founder who died in 1993. Sure to appeal to some Hispanic voters in swing states, Obama's move came at the start of a day in which he will later raise political cash at events in San Francisco.

The Romney campaign tried to raise money with an email appeal warning that Obama and his allies are on the verge of raising $1 billion to hold onto the White House. "We must not let them succeed — we are not letting them succeed," wrote Romney campaign manager Matt Rhoades.

The campaigns also were eyeing the next debate Thursday night, the sole faceoff between Vice President Joe Biden and the GOP running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan. Ryan's challenge is to overcome his lack foreign policy expertise or national debate experience against Biden, who has extensive experience on both fronts.

"Believe you me, I understand this man is extremely experienced, he's a gifted speaker, he's a proven debater," Ryan said on The Frank Beckman Show on Detroit radio station WJR. "So we definitely have our work cut out for us. But the problem the vice president has that he just can't get around is he has to try and defend Barack Obama's record and it's not a very good record to defend."

Romney has shifted his message in recent days to emphasize a moderate tone and a compassionate side he has rarely shown in public. Aides said he would continue to press that message while providing clear contrasts with Obama for the narrow slice of undecided voters.

"Hope is not a strategy," Romney said in the address at Virginia Military Institute. He argued Obama's leadership has been especially lacking in the Middle East as chaos continues to grow.

Monday's foreign policy speech, in which Romney repeatedly assailed Obama's leadership on the world stage, was part of that effort. The former Massachusetts governor is expected to deliver at least two more policy speeches in the coming weeks focused on job growth and debt and spending.

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 This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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