RENO, Nev. (AP) — President Barack
Obama accused rival Mitt Romney of being oblivious to the burdens of paying for
college on Tuesday, telling young voters in battleground Ohio that his
opponent's education policies amount to nothing more than encouraging them to
tap their parents for money or "shop around" for the best deal.
"This is his plan. That's his
answer to a young person hoping to go to college — shop around and borrow more
money from your parents if you have to. Not only is that not a good answer,
it's not even an answer," Obama said at Truckee Meadows Community College
in Reno.
Turning to young voters, a key
part of his 2008 coalition, the president sought to draw a bright line with
Romney on education policy in his latest attempt to meld Romney with the House
Republican budget blueprint offered Rep. Paul Ryan, Romney's running mate.
Earlier, at Capital University in
Columbus, Ohio, he said: "Not everybody has parents who have the money to
lend. That may be news to some folks."
Obama and Romney remain locked in
a tight presidential campaign a week before the former Massachusetts governor
formally claims his party's nomination at the GOP convention in Tampa, Fla.
Both campaigns have broadened their message to voters in recent weeks beyond
the economy, which remains the most pivotal issue for voters less than three
months before the election.
Romney sought to distance himself
from Missouri GOP Senate nominee Todd Akin, who apologized after saying in an
interview that women's bodies are sometimes able to prevent pregnancies after
what he called "a legitimate rape." Romney said in a statement that
fellow Missouri Republicans had urged Akin to quit and "I think he should
accept their counsel and exit the Senate race."
Romney was raising money to
bolster his campaign in Texas, where he told donors that his campaign was
"a little wiser in our spending of dollars" than Obama's campaign,
pointing to new finance documents released by Obama's campaign on Monday that
showed it spent more money in July than it brought in.
Romney and Republicans have
outraised Obama and Democrats for the past three months, a sign of broad GOP
interest in defeating the incumbent president.
"I'm not managing their
campaign for them, but we're going to spend our money wiser," Romney said
in Houston, where he was expected to pull in more than $6 million. "We're
going to spend it to win."
In a nod to oil-rich Texas, Romney
told donors he planned to announce a "comprehensive energy plan"
during a stop in New Mexico later this week but offered few details beyond a
focus in part on fossil-based fuels. Romney said his aim was to "fully
take advantage of our energy resources."
Romney's campaign countered the
president's education critique, saying college costs had skyrocketed under
Obama's watch and his economic policies had made it difficult for recent
college graduates to find work. Romney spokeswoman Amanda Henneberg said
Obama's policies were "just more of the same from a president who hasn't
fixed the economy or kept his promises to the young people who supported him
four years ago."
Obama's line of criticism Tuesday,
delivered in Ohio and then again at a community college in Reno, dovetailed
with his campaign's unrelenting effort to cast Romney as out of touch, playing
off his wealth and his background in private equity. Ryan, meanwhile, sought to
reassure voters about his and Romney's stance on Medicare and sustained the
GOP's efforts to cast Obama as a divisive figure.
Ryan tried to blunt criticism of
his plan to overhaul Medicare, saying his plan would protect the program for
seniors' grandchildren.
"You're going to hear a whole
lot of distortions because that's all he has to offer," Ryan told a rally
in the hull of Beaver Steel near Pittsburgh. He reminded voters in western
Pennsylvania of a comment Obama made during the 2008 campaign, saying some
voters in small towns "cling to guns or religion."
"I'm a Catholic deer hunter.
I'm happy to be clinging to my guns and my religion," said Ryan, who
walked on stage swinging a black-and-gold Pittsburgh Steelers Terrible Towel, a
nod to the popular hometown football team.
Democrats have tried to use Ryan's
budget proposal to undermine Romney's pitch to blue-collar voters, and Obama's
appeal on higher education was no different.
Democrats contend that Ryan's
budget proposal, which failed to pass the Democratic-controlled Senate, would
cut $115 billion from the Education Department, costing 1 million college
students their Pell Grants over the next decade. Democrats argue those moves
would punish many middle class and low income families trying to gain an
education.
Those estimates, however, assume
the cuts in Ryan's budget are applied evenly across all programs starting in
2014 — something Ryan aides say would not happen. His budget does not directly
address Pell Grant funding, and his aides say the cuts would not take a
one-size-fits-all approach.
Ryan, who prefers that students
take loans instead of receiving grants, would keep the top Pell Grant award in
the coming school year at $5,500 but in future years reduce the number of
students eligible, not the award sums. In other words, fewer students would
receive them but the neediest would not see their awards changed.
More than 9.7 million students are
expected to get grants for the academic year that is about to begin.
Following a lunchtime stop at
Sloopy's, a diner at nearby Ohio State University, Obama made a personal pitch
to college students at nearby Capital University, recalling that he and first
lady Michelle Obama had to dig out of a "mountain of debt" after
finishing law school.
He pointed to Romney's remarks on
higher education at a Youngstown, Ohio, town hall meeting in March, when the
GOP candidate suggested that college students would do better to "shop
around" for tuition rates and college loans or borrow money from parents.
"He doesn't think investing
in your future is worth it," Obama said in Columbus and later in Reno.
Obama was to repeat that education
pitch Wednesday in Las Vegas.
In taking his campaign to Nevada,
Obama was seeking votes in a state that by many measures presents one of his
toughest challenges. The state has an unemployment rate of 12 percent, highest
in the country and 3.7 percentage points higher than the national rate. It also
has among the worst foreclosure rates in the country.
In an interview Tuesday with
KRNV-TV in Reno, Romney said Nevada's housing market would rebound if federal
mortgage backers sell the thousands of homes they hold and make more options
available to avoid foreclosure. He said Nevada's lingering housing woes show
the president's policies haven't worked.
Obama, who has visited Nevada in
the past to promote his housing policies, did not mention housing in his
remarks in Reno.
In Minneapolis, Vice President Joe
Biden also tried to portray Romney as unsympathetic to the concerns of many
middle-income Americans, reprising the campaign's request that Romney release
more extensive tax returns.
"I've never run across a
presidential candidate who is a decent guy but is more out of touch than Mr.
Romney right now," Biden said. Citing the Obama administration's efforts
to reform Wall Street, Biden said the objections of Republican critics sounded
like "squealing pigs" and called the changes "some of the
toughest Wall Street regulations in history."
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