Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, and Salina Beattie display class work they did together in the 6th grade language arts class during Romney's tour of the Universal Bluford Charter School, Thursday, May 24, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, and Salina Beattie display class work they did together in the 6th grade language arts class during Romney's tour of the Universal Bluford Charter School, Thursday, May 24, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
President Barack Obama speaks to supporters during a campaign fundraiser in Denver, Wednesday, May 23, 2012. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney talks with Salina Beattie during a tour of the 6th grade language arts class at the Universal Bluford Charter School, Thursday, May 24, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Presumptive GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney likes to portray himself as a better job creator than President Barack Obama, but he may have a hard time backing up those boasts.
"We were able to create over 100,000 jobs," Romney said recently, recycling an old unsubstantiated claim. It is a debatable figure since many of those jobs were created long after Romney left Bain Capital, the Boston private equity firm he co-founded.
Romney's central theme is that his years at Bain better prepared him "to help fix the economy" than Obama, whose economic performance he calls lackluster.
Obama dismissed Romney's basic premise earlier this week when he told reporters in Chicago that a president's job "is not simply to maximize profits." The president claims Romney would bring back old Republican policies that didn't work in the past in solving the nation's economic problems.
"These are new problems that were created by President Obama," Romney told Fox News on Thursday. "We need new solutions if we're going to get this economy going again."
Romney's jobs assertion rests heavily on relatively small Bain stakes in companies such as Staples and Sports Authority that later grew large and profitable.
Ads by Obama's re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee emphasize how some companies that Bain invested in went bankrupt and workers lost their jobs while the firm still made money. Obama has been accused by Republicans ? and even some Democrats ? for appearing to be attacking private enterprise, something the president denies.
Obama held a fund-raiser in San Jose, Calif., Thursday and later planned to speak at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, where his campaign reminded voters is where Romney declared last year that "corporations are people." Romney visited a West Philadelphia charter school.
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Follow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tomraum. For more AP political coverage, look for the 2012 Presidential Race in AP Mobile's Big Stories section. Also follow https://twitter.com/APCampaign and AP journalists covering the campaign: https://twitter.com/AP/ap-campaign-2012.
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