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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Iowa Newspaper Scolds White House for Off-the-Record Caveat

President Obama and his campaign have been diligently working to win the endorsements from newspapers in battleground states, which is why he placed a call to The Des Moines Register on Tuesday.

While Mr. Obama will not learn until this weekend whether he will receive a second-term endorsement from the editorial page of Iowa's largest newspaper, he was handed an outside-the-Beltway lesson when an off-the-record conversation requested by the White House spilled into public view.

The editor of the newspaper, Rick Green, shared an account of the presidential telephone call with his readers in a blog post on Tuesday evening. He said that Mr. Obama “made a genuine and passionate case” for why he should be elected to a second term.

“Unfortunately, what we discussed was off-the-record,” Mr. Green wrote. “It was a condition, we were told, set by the White House.”

The White House invited Mr. Green and the newspaper's publisher, Laura Hollingswor th, to join a “personal call” with the president. Mr. Green said he was told that the “specifics of the conversation could not be shared.”

They accepted the call, but shared their concern with readers about what they characterized as a lack of transparency. But they said it “won't play a factor” in the editorial board's endorsement decision.

“That would be petty and ridiculous,” Mr. Green wrote. “We take far too seriously what's at stake this election and what our endorsement should say.”

The newspaper endorsed Mr. Obama in the 2008 general election, after backing Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Iowa caucuses following a prolonged period of courtship.

Mitt Romney met with members of the newspaper's editorial page earlier this month during a visit to Iowa. The interview drew attention when Mr. Romney said that he had no plan to pursue specific legislation on abortion.



Iowa Newspaper Scolds White House for Off-the-Record Caveat

President Obama and his campaign have been diligently working to win the endorsements from newspapers in battleground states, which is why he placed a call to The Des Moines Register on Tuesday.

While Mr. Obama will not learn until this weekend whether he will receive a second-term endorsement from the editorial page of Iowa's largest newspaper, he was handed an outside-the-Beltway lesson when an off-the-record conversation requested by the White House spilled into public view.

The editor of the newspaper, Rick Green, shared an account of the presidential telephone call with his readers in a blog post on Tuesday evening. He said that Mr. Obama “made a genuine and passionate case” for why he should be elected to a second term.

“Unfortunately, what we discussed was off-the-record,” Mr. Green wrote. “It was a condition, we were told, set by the White House.”

The White House invited Mr. Green and the newspaper's publisher, Laura Hollingswor th, to join a “personal call” with the president. Mr. Green said he was told that the “specifics of the conversation could not be shared.”

They accepted the call, but shared their concern with readers about what they characterized as a lack of transparency. But they said it “won't play a factor” in the editorial board's endorsement decision.

“That would be petty and ridiculous,” Mr. Green wrote. “We take far too seriously what's at stake this election and what our endorsement should say.”

The newspaper endorsed Mr. Obama in the 2008 general election, after backing Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Iowa caucuses following a prolonged period of courtship.

Mitt Romney met with members of the newspaper's editorial page earlier this month during a visit to Iowa. The interview drew attention when Mr. Romney said that he had no plan to pursue specific legislation on abortion.



Indiana Senate Candidate Draws Fire for Rape Comments

The delicate issue of pregnancies resulting from rape rattled another campaign for the Senate Tuesday when Indiana's Republican Senate nominee, Richard Mourdock, said a life conceived by rape “is something that God intended to happen” and must be protected.

The comments came during a debate with the Republican state treasurer, Libertarian candidate Andrew Horning and Representative Joe Donnelly, the Democrat locked in an unexpectedly tight contest for the seat now held by Republican Senator Richard Lugar. All three were trying to distinguish themselves, since they all are identified as opposing abortion.

“I've struggled with it myself for a long time, but I came to realize that life is that gift from God. And even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that God intended to happen.”

The comments echoed back to Republican Senate nominee Todd Akin‘s defense of his position opposing abortion in all instances. Mr. Akin, a Congressman from Missouri, had said, “If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.” That comment set off a firestorm, with Republicans and Democrats alike castigating Mr. Akin and Republicans pressuring him to leave his race against Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill. Mr. Akin refused, and a seat once widely expected to go to the Republicans in November now could stay with the Democrats.

Democrats, who have waged a fierce campaign against Mr. Mourdock, labeling him a Tea Party extremist, hoped lightning had struck twice.

“I think rape is a heinous and violent crime in every instance,” Mr. Donnnelly said in a statement after the debate. “The God I believe in and the God I know most Hoosiers believe in, does not intend for rape to happen - ev er. What Mr. Mourdock said is shocking, and it is stunning that he would be so disrespectful to survivors of rape.”

Mr. Donnelly, a Catholic, is also opposed to abortion. But the response forced Mr. Mourdock to back pedal.

“God creates life, and that was my point. God does not want rape, and by no means was I suggesting that he does,” Mr. Mourdock said.

The back and forth comes as Democrats - from President Obama on down - have tried to widen their advantage with women voters and play up the abortion issue. The Indiana Senate race is considered to be leaning Republican, but the state, which voted for Mr. Obama in 2008, is not in play this year. That was expected to give a slight edge to Mr. Mourdock, who defeated Mr. Lugar in a heated Republican primary.

Democrats quickly moved to capitalize on the controversy. The Democratic National Committee pointed to an advertisement that Mitt Romney cut for Mr. Mourdock, and asked whether the Republican p residential nominee would repudiate his endorsement.

“Richard Mourdock's rape comments are outrageous and demeaning to women,” said Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee. “Unfortunately, they've become part and parcel of the modern Republican Party's platform toward women's health, as Congressional Republicans like Paul Ryan have worked to outlaw all abortions and even narrow the definition of rape. As Mourdock's most prominent booster and the star of Mourdock's current campaign ads, Mitt Romney should immediately denounce these comments and request that the ad featuring him speaking directly to camera on Mourdock's behalf be taken off the air.”



Final Debate Draws Nearly 60 Million Viewers

Nearly 60 million television viewers at home tuned into the final presidential debate between President Obama and Mitt Romney on Monday night, despite stiff competition from two big sporting events.

Nielsen, a measurement company, said 59.2 million viewers at home were watching during an average minute of the debate, down from 67.2 million for the first debate on Oct. 3 and 65.6 million for the second debate on Oct. 17. The vice-presidential debate on Oct. 11 drew 51.4 million viewers.

The match-up between Mr. Obama and Mr. Romney was up against a “Monday Night Football” game on ESPN that had 10.7 million viewers and the final game of the National League Championship Series on Fox, which drew 8.1 million viewers.

All of the Nielsen numbers significantly understate the total viewing audience for the debates because they do not count viewers outside their homes, nor do they count those who viewed the debates on computers, tablets or cellphones. YouTube, for instance, said it served up millions of views of each debate, though it declined to say exactly how many.

The debate drew several million more viewers than did the third debate between Mr. Obama and John McCain in 2008, according to Nielsen, reflecting intense interest in the final weeks of the presidential election season this year.

About 11.5 million of the 59.2 million total viewers watched the debate on the Fox News Channel, a record high for the 16-year-old cable news channel. The channel's previous record, 11.1 million, was set during the debate last week.

Two broadcast networks, NBC and ABC, edged out Fox News during the debate, with 12.4 million and 11.7 million viewers, respectively. The other major broadcaster, CBS, had 8.4 million viewers.

More than 59.2 million viewers were watching at the beginning of the debate, and fewer were watching by the end - a typical result for an event that edges up against bed time. According to another TV measurement firm, Rentrak, the typical viewer watched 68 percent of the debate, down from 76 percent for the feistier town hall debate on Oct. 17.

“Americans are just not as interested in foreign policy as they are in domestic policy in this election,” said Bruce Goerlich, Rentrak's chief research officer.

Data provided by TiVo, a maker of set-top boxes, showed significant declines in viewership between 9 and 10:30 p.m. Of the major networks, Fox News viewers tended to tune out the fastest, according to the company's anonymous sample of set-top box users.



Ruling Raises Questions About List of Unsafe Consumer Products

Consumer groups said Tuesday that a federal court decision could threaten the effectiveness of saferproducts.gov, a relatively new federal database of unsafe products.

The ruling, by Judge Alexander Williams Jr. of United States District Court in Maryland, sided with a manufacturer who sued to keep its name out of the database, arguing that the complaint against it was confusing and contradictory and therefore should not be published.

The manufacturer, whose name and product remain anonymous, submitted medical data to the Consumer Products Safety Commission, which maintains the database, showing that the information in the database was “materially misleading.” The commission staff agreed, but the manufacturer argued that the corrected reports perpetuated the errors, and it filed a lawsuit.

Judge Williams, in a decision dated July 31 but made public on Monday, ruled that the safety commission's decision to publish the complaint was “arbitrary and cap ricious” and that it could influence a consumer's behavior, despite a disclaimer stating that the safety commission doesn't endorse the findings.

On Tuesday, several consumer groups filed an appeal of the judge's decision to keep some files sealed, as well as parts of the judge's ruling. They also contested the judge's decision to allow the manufacturer to proceed under the pseudonym “Company Doe.”

“The price that we pay for secrecy in cases like this is it can open the door to lots of litigants,” said Scott Michelman, an attorney for Public Citizen, one of the groups filing the appeal. “I do not expect this to be the last time that a company tries to keep a report of one of its products out of the database.”

In a prepared statement, the safety commission said, “The decision published yesterday concerning one incident reported to the saferproducts.gov consumer database does nothing to change the agency's statut ory mandate and enduring commitment to provide the public with a timely and searchable database of incidents involving consumer products. Consistent with the decision, the Commission did not post the individual report.”

Judge Williams dismissed allegations that the decision would set off a flood of lawsuits by companies trying to stay off the database. “The prospect of successful challenges to the database does not threaten to categorically compromise the Commission's consumer safety mission,” the judge wrote. “In sum, there is ample middle ground between the foundation this opinion lays and the apocalypse the Commission predicts.”

The database is the result of 2008 legislation that gave the safety commission more money and authority after numerous product recalls, including children's toys from China.

The database, which went online in March, allows consumers, and others, to file complaints of injury, or potential harm, for all types of products except for food, drugs, cosmetics, cars and guns. More than 11,000 reports have been filed to the database so far. Before incident reports are posted, manufacturers are given a chance to respond, and if they can show that the entire report or part of it is not accurate, the report is supposed to be redacted or not posted on the database.



About Those Horses and Bayonets ...

Yes, the American military still uses bayonets, and quite a few. There are horses too.

When Mitt Romney complained during Monday night's presidential debate that the Navy “is smaller now than at any time since 1917,” President Obama shot back with “Governor, we also have fewer horses and bayonets.'' Mr. Obama's line, meant to underscore that military capability matters more than sheer numbers, quickly ignited a fire on the Internet.

Marines quickly jumped in to say that they still attach bayonets to the end of their rifles, either the M4, M16 or M27. Of course, Mr. Obama did not say that the military has no bayonets and horses at all - just that there were fewer now than then.

While that is almost certainly true (the United States government drafted four million men in World War I), the 2012 United States Marine Corps still has more than 175,000 bayonets â€" or nearly one for each of the 197,500 current active-duty Marines. Marines carry bayonets wh en they deploy overseas, typically in sheaths attached to their body armor. In the martial arts training that all Marines receive, they are taught to attach them to their rifles in difficult or close-quarters situations.

“Basically when you're in a hand-to-hand-combat situation, if you're out of ammo and if your rifle malfunctions, you can attach the bayonet and still kill somebody,'' said Capt. Kendra Motz, a Marine Corps spokeswoman. The bayonet blade is 7 inches long.

Horses are still used for funerals at Arlington National Cemetery and in formal military parades. One of their most well-known uses in recent years was in Afghanistan in the fall of 2001, when elite teams of American commandos on horseback radioed in airstrikes to American pilots with the enemy's exact position.

As for the Navy, Mr. Romney is right that it is the smallest since 1917, the year the United States entered World War I. The war buildup is easy to see in Navy statistics: In 1917 there were 342 ships in the Navy compared with 245 ships the year before. At the end of 2011, there were 285 ships in the Navy. That's a slight increase from the George W. Bush administration, when in 2007 there were 278 ships.



App Snapshot: House - and Palace - Intrigue

The Election 2012 App

Though Republicans appear likely to hold onto the House, some individual contests have captured our attention, and there are also hints of post-vote intrigue among House Democratic leadership. We've collected the most interesting stories about the House race - from The Times and other top sources around the Web - in the Election 2012 app, where we're continuously curating the latest political news.

HOUSE RACE

  • G.O.P. Has Firm Grasp on House, but Democrats Won't Fold
    On the heels of three consecutive wave election cycles in 2006, 2008 and 2010 - when a net of at least 20 House seats changed partisan hands - 2012 appears to be shaping up to be more of a status quo year. (USA Today)
  • Illinois: Joe Walsh Tells Tammy Duckworth to Pull ‘Dirty' Attack Ad
    Representative Joe Walsh on Monda y urged his Democratic challenger to pull a new ad attacking the congressman over $117,00 in back child support the Tea Party-affiliated congressman's ex-wife alleged he owed in a now-settled lawsuit. (The Huffington Post)
  • California: After 40 years, Stark Faces Tough Battle
    Representative Pete Stark, one of Congress's most liberal and outspoken Democrats, faces perhaps the toughest campaign since he was first elected from Eric Salwell, a 31-year-old fellow Democrat. (The Los Angeles Times)
  • Massachusetts: Globe Endorses Tisei Over Scandal-Plagued Democrat
    Amid a scandal in Representative John Tierney's family, The Boston Globe's editorial board recommended Richard Tisei, an openly gay Republican, in the Sixth Congressional District, saying his “mix of libertarianism and fiscal conservatism makes an excellent blueprint for New England Republicans.” (The Boston Globe)
  • Pelosi Move Fuels Speculation Ove r Her Future
    Representative Nancy Pelosi's decision to delay a different type of House race, the Democratic leadership elections, until after Thanksgiving has spurred speculation about whether she is going to stay atop the caucus. (Politico)
  • Election Ratings and Map: The Race for the House
    (The New York Times)


When Free Stuff Leads You Astray

The main menu on Waze, a navigation and traffic app.The main menu on Waze, a navigation and traffic app.

We all like freebies. But sometimes, free stuff can lure you into making choices that may not really be best. I learned that lesson anew last week, while on a road trip that took me through rural parts of Arkansas and Missouri.

A quick comparison of flying time versus driving time had led me to choose the automobile for this outing. That meant I'd be behind the wheel for about six hours, but at least part of the route promised to include scenic foliage, and the weather looked good.

Since I was driving alone, I decided to use a voice-guided G.P.S. system, to avoid having to check maps while dodging road kill. I had recently acquired an iPhone (not the mos t recent version, infamous for its map snafus). So I did a quick online search to see what navigation app might work best. My cellular provider, Verizon, offered one, for an extra $5 a month. That might not sound so pricey, but I think my cellphone bill is already outrageous, so I balked and kept searching.

I quickly - too quickly, it turns out - settled on a free app called Waze that got high marks from various reviewers (including one for The New York Times). The app's main benefit is that it pools information from its users and sends back real-time information about traffic conditions, making it particularly popular with urban commuters seeking to avoid freeway snarls. I perhaps should have realized that an app aimed at commuters traveling familiar routes might not be the best fit for my purposes. But I figured it could still give me basic directions - and did I mention that it was free?

I ran a short test of the app the day before my trip, as I was running an errand, and it seemed to work. So I was hopeful when, in my driveway in the predawn darkness, I fired up the app and typed in the address of my destination. But at the end of my street, it told me to turn left. The correct option was to turn right. O.K., I thought, it will recalculate my route when it “sees” where I'm going. Ten miles later, it was still haranguing me to turn left - as if I were driving in some alternate universe, in which Missouri is west of Arkansas.

Michal Habdank-Kolaczkowski, communications director for Waze, explained that the app, which was introduced in the United States in 2009, begins with maps from the United States Census Bureau's Tiger system, but that they are tweaked and updated constantly by Waze users. That means that in areas like Los Angeles, where the app claims 10 percent of drivers as users, the maps get constant feedback from users, who help keep the app updated. In flyover country, however, there are fewer users - at least for now - so the maps are not always as accurate. (That's too bad. I wish the app could have warned me about those early-morning rural school buses, stopping every mile or two to pick up farm children.)

He encouraged me to correct any errors in the map, which is how Waze users benefit the system and others. But that is more of a commitment than I want to make for a one-time trip. I guess Waze isn't for me right now. Except for intermittent reporting trips, I work at home, so the commuting I do usually is from my desk to the coffeepot.

After realizing that Waze was not going to get me where I needed to go, I debated whether to forge ahead without electronic assistance. The directions on my print map looked simple enough, but I had an appointment to keep and didn't want any delays. So I pulled over and hunted down a new app on my phone. Not wanting to waste time, I opted for the Verizon app, VZ Navigator. It would give 30 days free on trial, it turned out, and it g ot me to my destination without a hitch. I wish I could say the same for the radio options on my route. I didn't have satellite radio or an iPod jack, so I had to choose between classic rock (Pat Benatar is as annoying now as she was then) or Glenn Beck (news flash: stockpiling nonperishable food is the new version of investing in gold).

The trip back home was almost as smooth, after an initial problem. When I tried to retrace my route in reverse, the VZ Navigator kept telling me to “take the next legal U-turn” for the first 20 minutes or so. It finally gave up and reset itself - just before I was about to turn it off and sing along to some vintage Journey.

Have you had any disappointing experiences with free stuff? What happened?



The Issue that Dare Not Speak Its Name

No mention of climate change: people gathered at the Ehsan Center in Los Angeles to watch the final presidential campaign debate.Agence France-Presse - Getty ImagesNo mention of climate change: people gathered at the Ehsan Center in Los Angeles to watch the final presidential campaign debate.
Green: Politics

A mountain of scientific evidence points to climate change as a serious risk for the human future. The Pentagon sees it as a threat to national security. Arctic sea ice hit a record low this summer. In some low-lying countries threatened by sea level rise, evacuation planning has already begun.

Yet the presidential debates are now o ver, and not once did climate change surface explicitly as an issue. This campaign is the first time that has happened since 1988, and environmental groups â€" and environmentally minded voters â€" are aghast.

“By ignoring climate change, both President Obama and Governor Romney are telling that rest of the world that they do not take it seriously, and that America cannot be expected to act with the intensity and urgency needed to avert catastrophe,” Erich Pica, president of Friends of the Earth Action, said in a statement. “Their silence prepares a future for our children and grandchildren in which we will face deeper droughts, fiercer forest fires and killer storms, messier spills and dirtier air. America deserves better.”

Well before Monday's final campaign debate, environmental groups dubbed the situation “climate silence” and even set up a Web site in an effort to force the issue into the campaign. It was all for naught, however. To my knowledge , Jim Lehrer and Bob Schieffer, the moderators of the first and third debates, have not explained their thinking in declining to bring up the issue, except to say that time pressure prevented them from asking about many important subjects.

In the second debate, the candidates spent more than 10 minutes talking about energy policy, yet the “c” word never came up. Candy Crowley of CNN, who moderated that debate, explained on the air afterward that while she knew that “you climate change people” wanted the subject raised, she felt that most voters preferred that the debate stay focused on the economy.

Throughout the campaign, the candidates have talked a great deal about energy, but it has essentially been a competition in who could heap the most praise on fossil fuels. They tended to avoid any explicit linkage between their energy proposals and climate risk.

Frustration on that front is palpable in many places, espe cially on college campuses.

“Young voters want an economic recovery, but we don't see the economy and the climate as separate issues,” David Snydacker, a Northwestern University graduate student working on clean-energy technologies, said in an e-mail. “Today's young scientists and engineers are preparing to build modern energy systems to sustain ten billion people. We see enormous potential in solar and wind energy, and we accept that fossil fuels will become increasingly expensive. Watching the candidates clamor to claim the title of ‘Mr. Coal Guy' is disappointing, to say the least.”

Mitt Romney has focused a great deal on coal, oil and natural gas production and criticized President Obama's push on green energy. He called for ending a tax credit that supports wind energy, angering even some Republican lawmakers from states like Iowa where wind production has become an important source of rural income.

Perhaps the closest Mr. Romney came to try ing to win over environmental voters was his campaign promise to “eliminate any barriers that might prevent new energy technologies from succeeding on their own merits.”

Since many environmental voters are in the Obama camp, the president's failure to bring up climate change in the debates may well have been a bigger disappointment to them than Mr. Romney's stance.

Mr. Obama used phrases like “the energy of the future” several times in the debates, and he explicitly mentioned climate change as a threat in his speech to the Democratic National Convention in September, later reprising that line in some of his stump speeches. Perhaps sensitive to the perception that Mr. Obama has ignored the issue, his campaign has been e-mailing environmental groups to call attention to these statements.

But Mr. Obama has mainly seemed concerned about protecting his right flank from Mr. Romney's criticisms. The president, of course, has faced a political backlash over his environmental agenda the last two years amid the rise of the Tea Party and the Republican takeover of the House. Even so, he has continued to pursue policies designed to lower carbon dioxide emissions, including tougher mileage standards for cars and regulation of emissions from power plants.

Some environmental groups, recognizing that a second Obama term would probably be better for their issues than a Romney presidency, have declined to publicly attack the president.

Many political observers are not especially surprised that climate change has gotten short shrift in this campaign. In general, environmental concerns tend to rise in the public mind in times of prosperity and sink in hard times. And polling suggests that, while most voters believe climate change is real, they see it as a long-term threat and therefore put it far down their list of priorities for action.

“No candidate has been able to portray climate change policy as a win-win,” Euge ne M. Trisko, a lawyer and consultant for the United Mine Workers of America, said on Tuesday. “That's because they understand that the root of climate change mitigation strategy is higher energy costs. It's an energy tax, and that's something you don't want to talk about in a debate.”



Consumer Bureau Is Seeking Credit-Reporting Complaints

Have a gripe about a your credit report, or a credit reporting bureauâ€"like Equifax, TransUnion or Experian? The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is now accepting complaints about credit reporting.

Credit reporting affects you when you try to apply for a credit card, home loan or car loan. It can even come into play when you seek insurance, or apply for a job.

Consumer credit bureaus track a consumer's credit history and create reports that are used to generate a three-digit credit score. Lenders use the information to decide whether they should give you a loan, and what sort of interest rate they will offer you.

If you think there is an error on your credit report, the bureau recommends that you first go through the credit bureau's own process for trying to correct the problem. But if you do so and are not satisfied with the resolution, the bureau wants to hear from you and is offering individual assistance to help resolve problems.

Other area s of concern may be problems in obtaining a copy of your credit report or your credit score, which is based on information in the report; improper use of your credit report; or problems with credit-monitoring products.

As with other areas that the bureau oversees, consumers submitting complaints about credit reporting issues are given a tracking number and can check the status of their complaint by logging on to the bureau's Web site. Each complaint will be processed individually and sent to the appropriate company for response. The bureau expects the reporting agencies to respond to complaints within 15 days and explain the steps they have taken or plan to take. Consumers will have the option to dispute the company's response to the complaint.

Have you run into trouble with one of the credit reporting bureaus? What happened when you tried to fix it?

 

 

 



TimesCast Politics: Campaign Moves to the Final Sprint

Damon Winter/The New York Times
  • 0:25  The Last Debate

    Michael Barbaro and David E. Sanger discuss the reactions and impact of the final presidential debate.

  • 8:33  The Female Vote

    Kit Seelye reports from New Hampshire on the all-important female vote.

  • 11:15  Race For the Senate

    Carl Hulse breaks down the key Senate races, including updates from Missouri and Connecticut.



Couple Talks About Romney\'s Aid to Their Son in New Crossroads Ad

One of the more compelling stories from Mitt Romney's time as a senior member of the Mormon Church is the subject of a new television commercial produced by a super PAC that has, until now, supported the Republican nominee mostly through attack ads.

The commercial, which was produced by Crossroads GPS, the group run with the help of Karl Rove and other top Republican strategists, features Ted and Pat Oparowski, a couple who lost their young son to cancer 30 years ago.

They first told their story to a national audience at the Republican National Convention in August. But now they will start sharing it with voters in swing states, in hopes of pushing Mitt Romney over the edge.

Mr. Romney helped the young man, David, prepare to die as his non-Hodgkins lymphoma worsened. Mr. Romney visited David in the hospital and helped him draft a will so he could give his possessions, like a skateboard and model rockets, away to his friends.

“He chose what he wanted to wear,” Ms. Oparowski says as her voice trembles. “He wanted to wear his Boy Scout uniform. And he chose to have Mitt give the eulogy at his funeral.”

Then, offering the kind of humanizing praise of Mr. Romney that his campaign has often been short on, Ms. Oparowski adds, “He cares about people and about their needs. I think he's going to be able to get us back on track, I really do.”

The ad ends with a gentle push: “Please Vote. Mitt Romney for President.”

The ad is notable not just for its content but also for where it is airing. It had its debut in Wisconsin on Tuesday morning, a state that is suddenly flush with Republican ad dollars now that the Romney campaign and its allies see a path to victory there.

Follow Jeremy W. Peters on Twitter at @ jwpetersNYT .



Obama\'s Remark Aside, No Imminent Deal on \'Fiscal Cliff\'

President Obama set heads spinning on Capitol Hill when he declared on Monday night during the final presidential debate that sequestration - $1 trillion in across-the-board spending cuts over the next decade - “will not happen.”

But no one should conclude that a secret deal to resolve the problem is imminent. It is not.

Administration officials confirmed on Tuesday that the president was repeating conventional wisdom in Washington: a deal will be struck to head off cuts that would slice about 9.4 percent from most military programs and 8.2 percent from domestic programs, beginning Jan. 2. But nothing will happen until after the election.

Administration officials have been expressing that confidence for weeks, even as they say no real negotiations are happening. Congressional Republicans reacted to the president's pronouncement as if he had jabbed them with a hot poker.

The staff of the House speaker, John A. Boeh ner, posted a missive on his Web page to drive home two points: that the across-the-board cuts were the president's fault, and that only the House had actually done anything to prevent them.

“Neither have Senate Democrats. They won't even debate and vote on the House-passed bill,” said Don Seymour, a spokesman for Mr. Boehner. “Instead, Democrats have threatened to drive the country off the ‘fiscal cliff' â€" which includes these devastating defense cuts â€" in their quest for a tax hike on small businesses. They're pushing for tax hikes that will destroy more than 700,000 jobs but have taken no action at all to stop the sequester.”

Those points are debatable. The speaker's office pointed to a passage in Bob Woodward's new book on Washington's budget morass, “The Price of Politics,” that said that Jacob J. Lew, the White House budget director at the time and now the White House chief of staff, came up with the idea of automatic across-the-board cut s to help force a bipartisan Congressional committee to find at least $1 trillion in deficit reduction.

But the “supercommittee” was empaneled as a way to avoid an economic crisis with a default on federal debt only because House Republicans were refusing to raise the nation's statutory borrowing limit, or debt ceiling. The legislation that created both the supercommittee and the sequestration hammer was written on Capitol Hill and passed with the full support of the Republican leadership.

And it was that supercommittee - not the White House - that failed to reach a deal, thus prompting the sequester.

House Republicans did indeed take the tough vote to shut off the automatic cuts to defense, by shifting those cuts to domestic spending on top of the automatic cuts still scheduled to hit those programs. Democrats would not accept any such deal. It is also not true that Mr. Obama has failed to propose a solution to the pending cuts. His budget for the 2013 fiscal year, proposed in February, would have shut off the sequester and replaced it with a mix of spending cuts and tax increases.

It was a solution no more acceptable to Republicans than the House solution was to Democrats.



On Twitter and Google, Signs of Less Interest in the Final Presidential Debate

All the president's horses and all the president's men could not get Twitter users to break a record again during last night's final debate. Even if they had been carrying bayonets.

Twitter users wrote approximately 6.5 million posts during Monday night's debate between President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The number was about a million less than the second debate. It represented a further cooling of activity tied to political events, after more than 10.3 million posts were published during the first debate, which set a record.

It's difficult to know what caused the slow down in activity on the social networking service. Maybe Twitter was the second screen for Monday Night Football fans. Or perhaps many potential debate viewers were glued to Game 7 of the National League Championship Series. Or, just maybe it was fatigue after three previous debates and a presidential election that has gone on for a very long time.

While t he debate may have been generally less interesting to users on Twitter, one moment did cause a flurry of activity: President Obama's wisecrack that the American military has “fewer horses and bayonets.” That remark coincided with a rate of more than 105,000 posts written per minute. In this case, the moment in the debate that went viral also generated the most activity, a contrast to the “Big Bird” and “binders full of women” moments in the previous debates, which lingered despite registering less activity as they were spoken.

The impact of the “horses and bayonets” statement was felt well beyond Twitter. Google reported that the phrase was the top rising search on its search engine between 9 p.m. and 10:45 p.m. Eastern time. Other searches that were common during the debate were “Syria,” “Mali, “drones” and “tumult.”

But the rising search that was most interesting was one that was absent from Google's Top 5: “Who is winning the de bate?” That question was the top rising search during the second debate, and also popular during the first debate. This time around, it would appear that it was a question that far fewer people were interested in answering.



On Twitter and Google, Signs of Less Interest in the Final Presidential Debate

All the president's horses and all the president's men could not get Twitter users to break a record again during last night's final debate. Even if they had been carrying bayonets.

Twitter users wrote approximately 6.5 million posts during Monday night's debate between President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The number was about a million less than the second debate. It represented a further cooling of activity tied to political events, after more than 10.3 million posts were published during the first debate, which set a record.

It's difficult to know what caused the slow down in activity on the social networking service. Maybe Twitter was the second screen for Monday Night Football fans. Or perhaps many potential debate viewers were glued to Game 7 of the National League Championship Series. Or, just maybe it was fatigue after three previous debates and a presidential election that has gone on for a very long time.

While t he debate may have been generally less interesting to users on Twitter, one moment did cause a flurry of activity: President Obama's wisecrack that the American military has “fewer horses and bayonets.” That remark coincided with a rate of more than 105,000 posts written per minute. In this case, the moment in the debate that went viral also generated the most activity, a contrast to the “Big Bird” and “binders full of women” moments in the previous debates, which lingered despite registering less activity as they were spoken.

The impact of the “horses and bayonets” statement was felt well beyond Twitter. Google reported that the phrase was the top rising search on its search engine between 9 p.m. and 10:45 p.m. Eastern time. Other searches that were common during the debate were “Syria,” “Mali, “drones” and “tumult.”

But the rising search that was most interesting was one that was absent from Google's Top 5: “Who is winning the de bate?” That question was the top rising search during the second debate, and also popular during the first debate. This time around, it would appear that it was a question that far fewer people were interested in answering.



In Post-Debate Rally, Obama Says Romney Has \'Stage 3 Romnesia\'

DELRAY BEACH, Fla.-Now the sprint starts.

President Obama blasted out of the gate first thing Tuesday morning, fresh out of his final debate with Mitt Romney, with exactly two weeks to go until Election Day. Appearing at a rally before 11,000 people here in the Florida Sunshine, the president delivered a no-holds-barred assault on Mr. Romney, accusing his G.O.P. rival of changing his positions so many times that he needs Obamacare to cover his pre-existing condition of “Romnesia.”

“Florida,” Mr. Obama said, “You know me. You can trust what I say.”

Mr. Obama went into a robustcritique of Mr. Romney's debate performance, calling it “at least Stage 3 Romnesia.”

“If you say you love American cars in the debate, but you wrote an article called ‘Let Detroit Go Bankrupt,' you might have Romnesia,” Mr. Obama said. “If you can't remember the policies on your Web site or the promises that you've been making over the 6 years you've been running for president, if you can't even remember what you said last week, remember, Obamacare covers pre-existing conditions.”

The president said Americans are used to seeing politicans change their positions from four years ago. “We're not accustomed to seeing politicians change their positions from four days ago.”

Seeking to blunt criticism that he's not been specific about proposals he would pursue in second term, he held up a newly printed brochure of his jobs and education plans, and pronounced that his “math adds up.”

“Compare my plan to Governor Romney's,” Mr. Obama said.

It is perhaps ironic that Mr. Obama began his two-week sprint to the finish line here in Palm Beach County, home of the infamous hanging chads of the Bush/Gore recount showdown in 2000. This year, in Florida the race is again on a razor's edge, and once again, this state is crucial to the hopes of both campaigns, albeit Mr. Romney' s more so than the president. Mr. Romney, who desperately needs Florida to win, has seen his poll numbers in the state improve in recent weeks. Similarly, Mr. Obama has seen his own poll numbersgoing down in Florida.

But Mr. Obama is not giving up on the state yet, and the Democratic get-out-the-vote machine in Florida is already hard at work.

“In Florida, voting is pretty easy. You can vote when its convenient for you and you can start voting this Saturday!” said Palm Beach County Obama campaign official Austin Brookley told the crowd of gathered in an outdoor arena here. “Sign up to volunteer for five hours, ten hours, whatever you got we can use it because Barack Obama deserves nothingless!”
The Obama campaign in Florida even hauled Scott Van Duzer-he of the bear-hugging-the-president-in-his-pizza-parlor fame-to introduce his new best friend. “I'm a Republican but hold it right there,” the ebullient Mr. Van Duzer told the about-to-start-booei ng crowd. “I voted for him four years ago and I'm voting for him again!” The boos changed to cheers.

He delivered a full-throatedintroduction, and by the time Mr. Obama jogged on stage, the two were hugging and grinning and backpatting in a lavishing display of man-love. “Every time I need a pick-me-up, I try to see Scott,” Mr. Obama said, in a reference to Mr. Van Duzer's bear hug last month during which he picked up Mr. Obama when the president visited his pizza parlor, despite the alarmed looks of the attendant Secret Service agents.

After Florida, Mr. Obama headed to Dayton, Ohio, stop two of his marathon swing state swing this week. He will also be doing appearances in Davenport, Iowa, Denver, Las Vegas, and then back to Florida when he hits Tampa on Thursday, then Richmond, Va., and then Cleveland.

And that only gets him to Thursday night.

Follow Helene Cooper on Twitter at @helenecooper.



Tuesday Reading: The Hunt for an Affordable Hearing Aid

A variety of consumer-focused articles appears daily in The New York Times and on our blogs. Each weekday morning, we gather them together here so you can quickly scan the news that could hit you in your wallet.

  • Settlement eases rules for some Medicare patients. (National)
  • Concern with drug compounders predates meningitis outbreak. (National)
  • A 5-concussion pee wee football game brings penalties for adults. (Sports)
  • Tech giants scramble to get up to speed in mobile world. (Business)
  • Flu vaccine effective against four strains, study finds. (National)
  • Monster energy drink cited in deaths. (Business)
  • Microsoft tightens personal data rules. (Business)
  • Amazon's cloud service goes down and so some Web sites. (Bits)
  • Nissan Altimas recalled for steering issues. (Wheels)
  • Young people frequent libraries, study finds. (Media Decoder)
  • Middle markets suffer airline neglect. (Business)
  • Plane or train? More travelers choose both. (Business)
  • The hunt for an affordable hearing aid. (Well)
  • Curbing enthusiasm on daily multivitamins. (Well)
  • Thinking twice about health checkups. (Well)
  • Plush pets that parrot your speaking. (Gadgetwise)
  • Your story, onstage. (The New Old Age)


Error-Filled Instructions Are Sent to Ohio Voters

A Republican-run election board in a northern Ohio county sent out voting instructions to several precincts with the wrong date for Election Day and an incorrect description of the polling place location, leading state Democrats to suggest foul play in a presidential race that could be decided in a handful of states like Ohio by tiny margins.

The Ottawa County Board of Elections sent a mailer to three precincts last week referring to Election Day as Nov. 8, instead of Nov. 6, and said their new voting place was in a building on the east side of the high school rather than on its west side.

The Ohio Democratic Party issued a statement saying, “This error is deeply troubling.” A party spokesman, Jerid Kurtz, said it was “paramount that voters not be misled” and asked the board not only to issue a correction but also to review all its correspondence with voters from the past year.

JoAnn Friar, director of the count y's elections board, said that the error was unintentional and that a corrected version was being edited and would be sent out promptly.

“We had three precincts changing polling locations from the high school gym to the new maintenance building, and the mailer we sent out had the wrong date,” she said. “Then in trying to give more precise directions, it said it was to the east of the high school, and it's really to the west.”

She said she suspected that the first error was a result of substituting part of the text on last year's form, which was stored in the computer and when Election Day was Nov. 8, without proofreading it. “We're sorry for the inconvenience,” she added. “There was certainly no intention of trying to make it more difficult for the voters.”

Ms. Friar said the wrong mailer went out to some 2,300 voters out of a total of about 30,000 in the county, which is on Lake Erie in northeastern Ohio near Toledo. Asked to explain how tw o errors were included in one short announcement, she replied, “If you're going to mess up, do it right.”