FAIRFAX, Va. -- Republican Mitt Romney accused President Barack Obama on Thursday of "failing American workers" by ignoring Chinese trade violations, and seized on new Federal Reserve attempts to boost the economy as proof the administration's policies are not working.
Obama campaigned as commander in chief after the violent deaths of four U.S. officials at a diplomatic post in Libya. "No act of terror will go unpunished ... no act of violence shakes the resolve of the United States of America," he said.
The president spoke in Colorado and Romney in Virginia with less than eight weeks remaining in a close campaign for the White House in tough economic times. The two states are among a handful likely to settle the race, and most polls rate Obama a shaky favorite.
With campaign costs mounting, Romney and Obama competed for the most innovative fundraising appeal.
The Republican challenger's campaign urged people in an email to make a $15 donation for a chance to join "Mitt on board the campaign plane for an exciting day on the campaign trail -- at 30,000 feet!"
Singer and actress Beyonce Knowles and hip-hop-artist-hubby Jay Z countered for the president. "Jay and I will be meeting up with President Obama for an evening in NYC sometime soon," she wrote. "And we want you to be there." As with a day aboard Romney's chartered jet, a donation was requested for a chance to win.
Only the fine print of both fundraising appeals made clear that no contribution was necessary to win.
Romney's focus on the economy followed a one-day campaign detour into a foreign-policy thicket that left him bruised and his quarry largely unscathed. He made little mention during the day of the events in Egypt and Libya that he had cited Tuesday as evidence of national security weakness on the president's part.
The issue intruded, though, when a heckler at Romney's rally yelled out, "Why are you politicizing Libya?" The crowd responded with chants of "U-S-A" and supporters tried to place a Romney/Ryan placard in front of the heckler's face.
"We're going to crack down on China," the former Massachusetts governor vowed in an appearance in the Virginia suburbs around Washington, D.C. He spoke after his campaign unveiled a television commercial claiming that China has outpaced the United States in new manufacturing jobs since the president took office. "Seven times Obama could have stopped China's cheating. Seven times he refused," it says.
The president pushed back.
White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters that all the actions the administration has initiated at the World Trade Organization to rein in China have been successful. The president's campaign said Obama has brought as many cases challenging China trade policies in 3 1/2 years as former president George W. Bush did in eight.
Inevitably, the Fed's new attempt to intervene in the economy became enmeshed in the campaign.
The nation's central bank said it will spend $40 billion a month to buy mortgage bonds for as long as it deems necessary to make home buying more affordable. It plans to keep short-term interest rates at record lows through mid-2015 -- six months longer than previously planned -- and made clear it's ready to try other measures to stimulate the economy if hiring doesn't improve.
"The idea is to quicken the recovery," said Fed chairman Ben Bernanke at a news conference where he announced the latest attempts to jolt a slow-growth economy that has left joblessness at 8.1 percent.
Carney, the White House press secretary, declined to comment, citing a long-standing policy when it comes to Fed actions.
But Romney, in an interview for ABC's "Good Morning America," summarized the central bank's moves as an admission of the failure of the president's own steps to restore robust economic growth. "And now the Federal Reserve, it says, `Look, this economy is not going well. ... They're going to print more money."
He added: "The president's saying the economy's making progress, coming back. Bernanke's saying, `No, it's not. I've got to print more money."
Romney has said previously that he opposes more measures along the lines that Bernanke announced during the day, and said in the interview he thought they would not succeed in boosting the economy.
For his part, Obama vowed to do "whatever is necessary" to protect Americans serving abroad.
"We are going to bring those who killed our fellow Americans to justice," he said in Golden, Colo. as two U.S. warships head for the Libyan coast.
Halfway around the world, anti-American protests spread to Yemen.
Obama said the U.S. would not consider Egypt an ally, "but we don't consider them an enemy."
The government in Cairo receives roughly $1.5 billion in U.S. aid annually, most of it for the military.
The president said in an interview with the Spanish-language network Telemundo that Egypt is a "new government that is trying to find its way." And he warned that if the Egyptian government takes actions showing "they're not taking responsibility," then it would "be a real big problem."
Administration officials later said the president was not trying to downgrade the relationship between the U.S. and Egypt.
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Espo reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Charles Babington in Golden, Colo., and Steve Peoples in Boston contributed to this report.
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