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After a grueling 18-month battle, the final US campaign day arrived on Monday for President Barack Obama and rival Mitt Romney, two men on a course for the US top job.
The candidates have attended hundreds of rallies, fundraisers and town halls, spent billions on attack ads, ground games and get out the vote efforts, and squared off in three debates.
Their running mates - Vice-President Joe Biden and Republican congressman Paul Ryan, have laid out the rationales for their bosses' aspirations. First Lady Michelle Obama, Romney's wife Ann and countless surrogates on both sides have made the case.
Monday marks the final attempt by incumbent and challenger to convince undecided voters that their policies, their platforms and their approach to leading the United States forward are the right ones come 2013.
And with polls showing that, for the most part, each has an equal shot at the White House, Obama and Romney will engage in unvarnished efforts to mobilize their core supporters.
"I need you, Ohio," Obama told a 20,000-strong crowd in Cincinnati, in a state for which both candidates are fighting tooth and nail.
Both candidates campaigned deep into the night on Sunday, with Romney, too, imploring his supporters to get out the vote in the handful of battleground states where the next occupant of the White House will be decided.
The final dash underlined the tightness of a race that is drawing to a close with the rival candidates and their aides confidently predicting victory after months of campaigning and conflicting fortunes in opinion polls.
As the clock ticked down to Tuesday's vote, Romney's efforts included a surprise foray into Pennsylvania, a Democratic-leaning state that Republican strategists say is breaking his way.
"We're taking back the White House because we're going to win Pennsylvania," Romney told a crowd of up to 30,000 who had gathered on a farm in frigid weather. Obama advisers dismissed the trip as a sign of desperation from the challenger less than 48 hours from election day.
And yet a valuable character witness, former president Bill Clinton, will headline four rallies for Obama on Monday in Pennsylvania, to counter Romney's late push there.
Democrats said they were confident of Obama's small but steady lead in key swing states, but acknowledged that everything now depends on getting the vote out.
Obama flew to New Hampshire to reprise a buddy act from the night before with Clinton, which saw the popular former president place his economic legacy on the younger leader's shoulders.
On a demanding swing, the Democratic incumbent also traveled to Florida, Ohio and Colorado before touching down in Wisconsin in the early hours on Monday.
Exhaustion began to show on both candidates this past weekend as they keep up frenetic paces straight into Monday, when each performs another multi-state crisscross that would make any frequent flyer proud.
Obama begins in Wisconsin, continues to Ohio and then to Iowa, the state where Obama began his presidential run in 2008, before returning to his hometown of Chicago.
Romney starts the day in the biggest swing state of all, Florida. He then flies to Virginia and kingmaker Ohio one last time before returning to where his campaign began 18 months ago: New Hampshire.
Campaign aides pointed at early voting advantages in Ohio and Florida as evidence Obama is close to sealing the deal in his quest to become only the second Democrat since World War II to get a second term.
Questions:
1. When was the final campaign day?
2. Where did Romney have a surprise foray?
3. Where is Obama’s hometown?
Answers:
1. Monday.
2. Pennsylvania.
3. Chicago.
(中國日報網(wǎng)英語點(diǎn)津 Helen 編輯)
About the broadcaster:
Emily Cheng is an editor at China Daily. She was born in Sydney, Australia and graduated from the University of Sydney with a degree in Media, English Literature and Politics. She has worked in the media industry since starting university and this is the third time she has settled abroad - she interned with a magazine in Hong Kong 2007 and studied at the University of Leeds in 2009.
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