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Romney targets Obama after sweeping five more primaries

U.S. Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney holds a rally with Florida Senator Marco Rubio at Mustang Expediting in Aston, Pennsylvania, April 23, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Makela

(Reuters) – Republican Mitt Romney launched his general election

campaign against President Barack Obama after sweeping five primaries on Tuesday, condemning the president for false promises

and weak leadership and declaring “a better America begins tonight.”

Romney claimed victory in

the Republican nominating race and outlined the themes of his campaign against Obama, asking Americans if they were better

off under his administration and accusing the president of failing to deliver on his campaign pledges of hope and

change.

“What do we have to show for three-and-a-half years of President Obama?” Romney asked during a speech in New

Hampshire. “Is it easier to make ends meet? Is it easier to sell your home or buy a new one? Have you saved what you needed

for retirement? Are you making more in your job?”

Romney, a former head of a private equity firm who has put the

struggling economy at the center of his campaign, slammed Obama’s economic policies and said they had led to “hopes and

dreams diminished.” He promised he would offer a better chance to those who are struggling.

“People are hurting in

America, and we know that something is wrong, terribly wrong with the direction of the country,” he said.

“This

election is about the kind of America we will live in,” he said. “In the America I see, character and choices matter. And

education, hard work, and living within our means are valued and rewarded.”

Romney’s speech, focused almost

exclusively on the economy, came after he rolled to easy double-digit victories in five Northeastern states – Connecticut,

Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island – with a combined 231 delegates.

The wins moved Romney, who entered

the night with 695 delegates, closer to the 1,144 he needs to formally clinch the nomination, a milestone that is still weeks

away.

Romney effectively ended the Republican race on April 10 when his top rival, Rick Santorum, suspended his White

House campaign, but the speech in the general election battleground state of New Hampshire was the first time he had claimed

the mantle of presumptive nominee.

“After 43 primaries and caucuses, many long days and more than a few long nights, I

can say with confidence, and gratitude, that you have given me a great honor and solemn responsibility,” Romney

said.

GINGRICH TO QUIT?

The primaries on Tuesday could be the beginning of the end for another remaining rival,

former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich. He had said he would reassess his candidacy if he did not win the

primary in Delaware, where he had campaigned heavily in recent weeks.

Romney beat Gingrich by more than 30 percentage

points in Delaware and won all of the state’s 17 delegates. But Gingrich did not concede during a speech in North Carolina

after the vote. He said he planned to continue his schedule in the state this week.

Gingrich has won only two primary

contests – in South Carolina and in Georgia, which he represented in Congress – and his campaign is deep in debt, but he has

been hanging on to keep pressing Romney on conservative issues.

The other remaining candidate, libertarian Texas

Congressman Ron Paul, said again on Monday that he would not drop out of the race even after Romney clinches the

nomination.

Romney, a former governor of Massachusetts, enters the election campaign bruised from a bitter primary

battle with a series of challengers who questioned the sincerity of his conservative views.

He is faced with the task

of consolidating support from conservatives who distrust him for the more moderate positions he took as governor of liberal

Massachusetts, particularly his support for a healthcare overhaul that became a precursor to Obama’s federal plan.

At

the same time, he must turn toward winning over undecided independent voters who are likely to decide the election, and

bolster his lagging support among women, Hispanics and young people.

Romney is also launching a search for a

vice-presidential running mate. Included on his long list of potential No. 2s is Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who campaigned

with him in Pennsylvania on Monday.

In spite of those challenges, Romney opens the election campaign in a relatively

strong position, with national opinion polls showing a tight race with Obama.

Obama, who has the advantages of

incumbency, is well-liked by Americans but there are deep doubts about his handling of the economy and anger over high

gasoline prices that may, however, be trending downward.

He must convince Americans that his prescriptions for the

sluggish economy will lead not just to a stock market gains, but to real job growth among the dispirited middle

class.

Obama visited two battleground states on Tuesday, North Carolina and Colorado, to appeal for support from young

voters with a call to make education more affordable.

He stressed his modest background and the student loans he

needed for college, references that seemed designed as a swipe at the multimillionaire Romney.

Given the stakes, the

presidential campaign will likely be negative as the two sides battle through TV and radio ads. Both candidates and the

outside groups that support them are building campaign accounts likely to reach into the hundreds of millions of

dollars.

Their goal is to portray the other side as being out of touch with the concerns of ordinary Americans and

unable to solve intractable problems, from debt to deficits, to caring for an aging population.

(Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by

Alistair Bell and David

Brunnstrom)

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