President Obama's Closing Act: An Epic Collapse                                                                                Oct 20,  2012                                        Click if you like this column!                                                                                                                                                                                              The ongoing collapse of President Obama's campaign may lead to  some  extraordinary stunts during Monday's last debate, but no matter  what he  tries, it is very unlikely that the president can reverse the  enormous  momentum behind Mitt Romney's campaign.  (One data point.  Congressman John Campbell, a frequent guest on my radio  show, polled  his district this week.  It is Califronia's 45.  John  McCain carried it  by 4.7 points in 2008.  Mitt Romney is almost 20  points ahead in this  cycle.  Campbell reports that this sort of result  is showing up across  the country.) 
   The nation is simply finished with a president  whose rhetoric has never  been matched by his actions, and whose  performance has removed Jimmy  Carter from the bottom of the rankings of  the modern president. 
   The president of course has his  passionate supporters. These are the  same people that spent last  Tuesdaynight declaring him the winner of his  second meeting with Mitt  Romney, and Wednesday and Thursday trying to  infuse the word "binder"  with game-changing significance. 
   They are the same people who spent Friday denying that "not optimal" was not a big deal. 
    "Binder" --big deal. "Not optimal" --no deal at all. That's the state  of  the Obama campaign: A nearly Orwellian effort at making some words   matter and others disappear while facts are pushed aside It hasn't   worked. It won't work.. 
   Mitt Romney by contrast followed two  very strong debate showings with a  wonderful set of remarks at the Al  Smith dinner, the third time in two  weeks that he has reassured those  just tuning into the presidential  campaign that he will be a steady and  reliable force for good in the  Oval Office. 
   Romney was ready for his close up. This is the primary reasion behind his surge. 
    And what a surge. Romney was up seven points in Thursday's Gallup   tracking poll, and even the very partisan Democratic polling firm PPP   has Romney ahead in Iowa and New Hampshire on Friday. The president is   hdidng from reporters to avoid more Libya questions, and when he   hand-picks a safe zone --a comedy show hosted by a huge ally-- he still   falls on his face, and not just with the "not optimal" comment but with   his doubling down on clsoing Gitmo. 
   The market shudders, the  quesiness about earnings, the goofy jobs data  --all this and more is  fueling the growing, now urgent sense of a need  for a big change. A  U-Turn. And Mitt Romney is the beneficiary. 
   Every motorist who  gases up between now and election day (especially  those in California)  should recall last Monday's debate and the direct  question to the  president about gas prices which he refused to asnwe                 
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