DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. - In advance of Monday's final presidential debate set for Florida, the candidates and their top surrogates converged on this key swing state, where a prize of 29 electoral votes could determine who wins in November.
The focus on Florida comes as the race for the White House enters its final stretch, with polls showing President Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney neck-and-neck in the Sunshine State.
Vice President Joe Biden and Romney's running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan, spent the day rallying supporters in Florida, with Ryan's campaign jet at one point rolling across the tarmac in Tampa past Biden's Air Force Two.
Ann Romney and First Lady Michelle Obama also have events scheduled for South Florida in coming days.
With the economy still the key issue in the race, Obama got some potentially good news on Friday: New data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that the unemployment rate dropped in 41 states last month, including many of the top swing states. Those include Florida, Colorado and Iowa. Yet Florida's rate, at 8.7 percent, remains higher than the national average, and unemployment is still high across the country.
Romney prepared for the debate in the morning in New York before flying to Florida for an evening rally. It was the 10th straight week that the campaigns have had a presence in Florida.
The contest for the state has been competitive for most of the year, with Obama's mid-September edge now apparently gone. There also has been significant variability in polls taken after the first presidential debate, with a Mason-Dixon poll showing Romney up 7 percentage points and an NBC-WSJ-Marist poll showing Obama up only 1 percentage point.
According to a CNN/ORC International poll conducted in Florida after the second presidential debate, the race is virtually tied. Romney has the support of 49 percent of likely voters, with 48 percent backing Obama -- a margin that is within the poll's sampling error.