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Details, please, in campaign

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A version of this editorial appeared in the Miami Herald on Monday:

Attend enough campaign rallies and listen to enough of those my-opponent-stinks commercials and you could come away convinced that the country is hopelessly divided and fearful. It's the moochers vs. the 1 percent, the patriots vs. the peaceniks, "real" Americans vs. "other" Americans. Unless our candidate wins, we're doomed.

We don't buy it. This electoral season, the first presidential race since the Citizens United decision, has produced more divisive campaign ads than ever before, and the frustratingly weak economy has raised the anxiety level over the nation's future. But candidates and the electorate seem to agree on urgent priorities — the what, if not the how.

Committed ideologues aside, most voters aren't looking for a conservative or liberal approach to issues. They want fair and workable solutions. That's what the campaign ought to be about.

At this stage, some things are fairly clear:

Under Republican Mitt Romney, there would likely be fewer taxes and less spending than in a second Obama term.

Mr. Romney would try to repeal most of Mr. Obama's Affordable Care Act, re-opening a debate the Supreme Court had settled.

The president wants a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants already here who meet certain criteria. Mr. Romney doesn't, although he has softened his stance on "self-deportation."

Mr. Romney has been talking tough to adversaries abroad, but tough talk is not a policy, and Mr. Obama's own record on national security is strong. Mr. Romney's failure to visit Latin America on his world tour was disappointing.

Yet for all the differences, major questions remain. Mr. Romney rebuffs calls for a "balanced" approach to the budget — raising revenue and reducing spending. But his detailed, 59-point economic plan dodges the tough questions on how to do it.

President Obama, for his part, has not made clear how he would tackle Medicare and Social Security to make these programs more sustainable.

As the presidential debates begin on Wednesday, undecided voters should be looking for answers on these and other key questions.

At this point, neither candidate has this election in the bag.


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