An uneasy U.S. economy helps shape mood of voters

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Ray Arvin poses by his work computer, in Charlotte, N.C. Arvin, a Romney supporter, used to own a small business with five employees, selling equipment to power companies, but he went out of business in 2009. He’s now a salesman for another equipment company. Polls consistently find that the economy is the top concern of voters, and Romney tends to get an edge over Obama when people are asked who might do better with it. Whether that truly drives how Americans vote is a crucial question for Election Day. (AP)
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Other factors often came into play with the people who talked to AP. Republicans didn’t buy the Romney campaign’s portrayal of Obama as a one-man wrecking crew in economic affairs. Democrats didn’t see him as a savior. They all realize life is more complicated than that.

Beth Ashby, 38, an artist and freelance photographer in North Hollywood, Calif., is a registered Democrat who thinks Obama is bad for her savings. If he’s re-elected, she said, “I think I’m going to be less likely to set money aside in my investments. I might be safer just storing it in the shoe box under the bed.”

Romney, she said, “seems to have a head for business.” But he’s turned her off on environmental issues, abortion and “some of his comments involving women.” Obama or a third-party unknown will get her vote.

Dave Hinnaland, 51, a fourth-generation sheep and cattle rancher who co-owns the family’s 17,000 working acres outside Circle, Mont., simply seems hard-wired to vote for a Republican president. As the national economy sank, the local economy shot ahead thanks to booming oil production in the Bakken oil fields to the east. The days of $300-a-month house rentals, when people’s pickups were more expensive than their homes, are over.

“When this area was settled 100 or more years ago, there were people who took a chance and moved out here,” he said. “They worked hard and were able to build something for themselves and their families.”

So his message to all in Washington: “Let us have the means and options to chart our own path. Don’t hamstring us with rules and regulations. And let people that are willing to go out to work take a chance, let them have the opportunity to do it. We don’t need a big hand hovering over our head telling us what we can and cannot do.”

If the recession spared oil and gas lands, Kaufmann, of Kunkletown, Pa., saw it coming in the gutter trade, specifically when he started noticing that nearly all of his customers’ checks were drawn on home equity credit lines.

“How long do you think this is going to last?” he recalled asking his wife. “I said, ‘I just did a homeowner, the wife lost her job, and without her job, he can’t afford the mortgage.’ That’s when we started buckling down. I said, ‘You know what? It’s time.’

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