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              Romney Touts Business Background in Presidential Bid

   by Jim Malone

   Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney will be formally nominated
   next week as the Republican Party's presidential candidate at the
   party's convention in Tampa, Florida.
   The Republican ticket for 2012:  Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. In his bid
   to become the 45th President of the United States, Romney highlights
   his business experience.
   "I understand those things, and I want to bring that understanding to
   make sure we can create good jobs for every American that wants a good
   job," he said.
   If elected, Romney says he would lower taxes, cut government spending,
   reduce the budget deficit and repeal President Obama's signature health
   care law.
   Romney made millions as a top executive with [1]Bain Capital, one of
   the world's largest private investment firms. He helped rescue the 2002
   Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City from financial distress and served
   one term as governor of Massachusetts.
   Romney fell short in his first try for the Republican nomination four
   years ago.
   But he prevailed this year over more conservative rivals Rick Santorum
   and Newt Gingrich and overcame [2]doubts about his Mormon religion.
   Romney now leads a party committed to defeating President Obama in
   November, says analyst John Fortier.
   "Mitt Romney may not be the most enthusiastic candidate, but the
   prospect of beating Barack Obama, a person that Republicans disagree
   with very strongly, is a very strong motivating factor," he said.
   On foreign policy, Romney says President Obama has damaged relations
   with longtime ally Israel and has not been tough enough with Iran,
   China and Russia.
   "And in dealings with other nations [President Obama] has given trust
   where it is not earned, insult where it is not deserved and apology
   where it is not due," he said.
   Romney has focused on the weak economy.  But public opinion polls show
   he faces a challenge because voters find the president more likeable,
   says American University expert Jennifer Lawless.
   "There's no question that Mitt Romney has a problem on this front," she
   said. "But in a lot of ways maybe it's time to just embrace that
   problem and say to the American people, `Look, I know that you don't
   like me that much but I can get this country moving in the right
   direction.'"
   Romney is less well known than President Obama, something both
   campaigns will try and address in the final weeks of the campaign, says
   [3]Quinnipiac pollster Peter Brown.
   "There is a race to define Mitt Romney to the American voter and the
   race is between the Obama people who want to define him negatively and
   the Romney people who want to define him positively.  The campaign that
   does the best job defining Mitt Romney is going to win," he said.
   Mitt Romney is 65, is married to his wife Ann since 1969, and they have
   five sons.
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   [4]http://www.voanews.com/content/romney_touts_business_background_in_p
   residential_bid/1494654.html

References

   1. http://www.baincapital.com/
   2. http://www.voanews.com/content/romney-faces-political-challenge-over-religion-132209373/173531.html
   3. http://www.quinnipiac.edu/institutes-and-centers/polling-institute/presidential-swing-states-%28fl-oh-and-pa%29/release-detail?ReleaseID=1789
   4. http://www.voanews.com/content/romney_touts_business_background_in_presidential_bid/1494654.html