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Business News/ News / World/  Obama: Election fundamentals unchanged despite “bad night”
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Obama: Election fundamentals unchanged despite “bad night”

Obama’s aides hint at some adjustment in the strategy at the next debate

The latest round of polls show that Mitt Romney (right) has erased Barack Obama’s once-substantial lead and made it a dead heat in the final stretch to the 6 November election in the wake of last week’s debate. Photo: ()Premium
The latest round of polls show that Mitt Romney (right) has erased Barack Obama’s once-substantial lead and made it a dead heat in the final stretch to the 6 November election in the wake of last week’s debate. Photo:
()

Washington: US President Barack Obama insisted on Wednesday the “fundamentals" of the race for the White House remain unchanged despite a “bad night" for him in a presidential debate that stunned many of his supporters and re-energized Republican rival Mitt Romney’s campaign.

The latest round of polls show that Romney has erased Obama’s once-substantial lead and made it a dead heat in the final stretch to the 6 November election in the wake of last week’s debate, which the Republican was widely judged to have won handily.

“Governor Romney had a good night. I had a bad night," Obama told the ABC World News programme, according to advance excerpts of his first interview since the 3 October face-off in Denver.

“It’s not the first time I’ve had a bad night. But I think what’s important is the fundamentals of what this race is about haven’t changed," Obama said as he sought to play down the overall impact. “You know, Governor Romney went to a lot of trouble to try to hide what his positions are."

Pressed for an explanation of what went wrong in the first of three presidential debates, Obama appeared reluctant to offer much insight.

“Maybe this is because I played a lot of sports when I was a kid, and still do," he said. “If you have a bad game, you just move on. You look forward to the next one. And it makes you that much more determined. The difference between this and sports is that the stakes are so high."

Asked flat-out whether his debate performance had handed the election to Romney, Obama said, “No."

Obama’s aides have acknowledged that he will make some adjustments for the next debate—a townhall-style event in Hofstra University in New York state on Tuesday.

They have hinted he will use a more aggressive approach after even his own supporters criticized him for being too passive in Denver.

According to a Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll released on Wednesday, Romney has pulled ahead of Obama in the race for the first time in more than a month and leads 45% to 44% among likely voters.

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Published: 11 Oct 2012, 10:11 AM IST
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