Republican front-runner Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama are trading jabs even before Republicans vote in their latest presidential primaries,a sign that both sides believe the race to decide who will oppose the Democratic incumbent in the November election is coming to a close. With Republican primaries Tuesday in Wisconsin,Maryland and Washington,D.C.,Romney is set to hold one campaign event before an election night party in Milwaukee. He spent the weekend campaigning across Wisconsin,working to win yet another big industrial state that rival Rick Santorum was counting on to keep his fading candidacy alive. ''Take the next step here in Wisconsin,'' Romney urged supporters at his last campaign stop Monday. ''I need you to go out and vote. Get your friends.'' Obama is treating the former Massachusetts governor as though he's already won the Republican nomination. The president's re-election campaign is running a new TV ad in five swing states attacking Romney by name for the first time - in this case as a backer of ''Big Oil'' amid high gasoline prices. While charging that Obama's version of a perfect world is one with ''a big-spending big government,'' Romney is acting as though his opponents for the party's nomination no longer matter. Romney has 572 Republican National Convention delegates,half of the 1,144 needed to win the nomination,and is on a pace to clinch it by the end of the primary season in June. Santorum has 272 delegates,Newt Gingrich,the former speaker of the House of Representatives,has 135 and Texas Rep. Ron Paul 51. There were 95 delegates at stake Tuesday,including 42 in Wisconsin,the only one of the three contests that Santorum seriously contested. Romney is expected to do well in Maryland and in the U.S. capital,where Santorum's name doesn't appear on the ballot. The former Pennsylvania senator has retreated to his home state to watch returns from Wisconsin,holding an evening event in Mars,a town outside Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania holds its primary on April 24. Romney has ignored Santorum the past few days and focused instead on Obama,telling supporters in Green Bay,Wisconsin,that the president ''takes his political inspiration from the capitals of Europe.'' Obama's ad claims that ''Mitt Romney's stood with Big Oil _ for their tax breaks,attacking higher mileage standards and renewable energy sources.'' It's a response to an ad from Crossroads,a Republican super political action committee that's expected to spend millions of dollars attacking the president this year. Romney's campaign,though,is running far behind the president in fundraising as he's been unable to raise general election money because of the drawn-out primary contest. At the end of February,Obama reported $84.7 million in his campaign account compared with Romney's $7.3 million. Obama has more than 530 paid staff compared with roughly 100 for Romney. But Romney has far outspent his Republican rivals during his bid for the nomination. Santorum,also campaigning in Wisconsin on Monday,said Romney has essentially bought his success by outspending the competition. Romney and his allies have spent a combined $53 million on television advertising so far this election cycle compared with just $27 million from his three Republican competitors combined,according to data compiled by the media tracking firm SMG Delta. Santorum's team,having narrowly lost a string of high-profile contests,spent just $9 million. ''With almost unlimited resources,Gov. Romney has not proven to be very effective,'' Santorum said as he predicted a possible upset in Wisconsin. ''The only way he's been successful in winning the primaries is by just bludgeoning his opponents by an overwhelming money advantage _ something he's not going to have in the general election.'' Obama received a boost Monday from former President Bill Clinton,who said he believes Obama can win re-election if he's able to convince voters he steadied a shaky economy. Clinton also told ABC television he thinks Romney will have a difficult time reconciling positions he's taken during the primary season with what he'll say against Obama in the fall. One effect of the Republican nomination fight has been to push the once-moderate Romney far to the right of the political spectrum.