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Presidential politics begin again in Sandy's wake

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Accompanied by U.S. Secret Service agents, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney greets supporters as he campaigns at Integrity Windows in Roanoke, Va., Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) (Charles Dharapak STF)

ROANOKE, Va. – Presidential politics reignited in the wake of natural disaster Thursday, with the candidates beginning their full-throttle closing arguments with new vigor on the same pocketbook concerns that have dominated the campaign from the start.

President Barack Obama, Republican rival Mitt Romney, their wives and running mates were blitzing across the country in the busiest day of campaign events yet. The six principals were hitting seven swing states that will help determine on Tuesday which man will occupy the White House for the next four years.

After avoiding criticism of Obama by name for a full day after Superstorm Sandy, Romney aides said Thursday it was game on. That was evident as Romney stood in front of a semitrailer cab emblazoned with the logo of the Roanoke, Va., window and door factory hosting his first rally of the day.

Romney opened a new criticism of Obama's suggestion in an interview earlier this week with MSNBC that he would create a secretary of business. "We don't need a secretary of business to understand business, we need a president who understands business, and I do," he said. Romney's crowd seemed as charged as he was, interrupting with frequent whoops of applause and chants of "Five more days!"

Obama also focused on the economy, arguing that Romney is not the agent of change he is trying to portray himself as and asking for four more years to complete his work. His closing argument stump speech is heavy on nostalgia harkening back to his hopeful 2008 campaign and even the days when President Bill Clinton led Americans to better economic times.

"By the end Bill Clinton's second term America had created 23 million new jobs, and incomes were up and poverty was down and our deficit became the biggest surplus in our history," Obama said. "So Wisconsin, we know the ideas that work."

No one was hitting the ground harder in the final days than Clinton, who acted as a surrogate campaigner in chief while Obama was off the trail and had four stops scheduled Thursday in Wisconsin and Ohio. Clinton and Obama planned to appear together along with singer Dave Matthews on Friday night in Bristow, Va.

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