MANSFIELD, Ohio -- President Barack Obama squeaked out a fundraising victory over Mitt Romney in August as the candidates gear up for the final stretch of their closely contested campaign.

Obama raised more than $114 million, while Romney topped $111 million, according to numbers the rival campaigns released yesterday. It's the first time in four months that the Democrats have raised more than Republicans. It's also a sharp increase for the president, who raised $75 million in July.

Despite Obama's advantage in August, it's the third straight month that Romney has collected more than $100 million, and the figure represents his best one-month fundraising total. Romney has socked away more money for the general election.

Campaigning yesterday in the critical battleground of Ohio, Romney went after Obama on jobs and pledged that he and GOP running mate Paul Ryan will get Americans working again and for higher wages, too.

"America does not have to have the long face we have right now under this president," Romney said in Mansfield.

The Republican nominee also took a veiled swipe at Obama and Democrats for at first omitting specific references to God in the party's platform adopted at its convention last week, then doing an abrupt and, to some, embarrassing about-face to include it.

Obama spent Monday at the White House, after a weekend campaigning in Florida.

Romney said America is a "nation under God" and that, if he's lucky enough to become its president, "I will not take God out of my heart, I will not take God out of the public square and I will not take it out of the platform of my party."

Before arriving in Ohio, the Republican hopeful showed signs of taking a new, more centrist tack toward health care and military spending.

Romney said in an interview that aired Sunday that he would keep in place elements of the federal health care law Obama signed in 2010. On NBC's "Meet the Press," Romney said: "I'm not getting rid of all of health care reform. Of course, there are a number of things that I like in health care reform that I'm going to put in place."

Campaign aides said Romney's endorsement of parts of Obama's Affordable Care Act was consistent with his previous position that those who haven't had a gap in coverage shouldn't be denied coverage.

The comments brought renewed attention to the similarities between the bill Obama signed and the one Romney put in place as governor of Massachusetts.

Romney aides dismissed the idea that his latest comments were an effort to appear less partisan with the race for undecided voters under way.

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