Sep 21

Depending on the media outlet you followed or saw more this past week, you either heard that presidential candidate Mitt Romney was revealed to hold extreme views of American citizens by class, or spoke the truth about taxpayer realities. He either blundered in an unsalvageable gaffe, or hit the chord that resonated finally with voters both partisan and until now, undecided.

What he said was this, caught on video at a private fundraiser earlier this year.

“There are 47% of the people who will vote for the president, no matter what,” Mr. Romney said in the video. “All right, there are 47% who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it. That that’s an entitlement. And the government should give it to them. And they will vote for this president no matter what.…These are people who pay no income tax.”

Mr. Romney also said in the video that his “job is not to worry about those people. I’ll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives.”

The GOP nominee, in a hastily scheduled news conference in Costa Mesa Monday night, didn’t back away from his remarks.

“It’s not elegantly stated, let me put it that way,” Mr. Romney said. “I’m speaking off the cuff in response to a question.”

Mr. Romney in the video was drawing on the fact that many American households pay no federal income tax—a group that includes about 46% of American households in 2011, according to the Tax Policy Center, a joint venture of the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute.

It got relentless play in all the news cycles. This, during the Middle East conflagration.

Since media played the 47 percent remarks ad nauseum, let’s get some perspective. If you’re wonkish (I mean, really wonkish), this WSJ piece breaks it down. It’s so dense, I’m not even going to wade into it, in all fairness to the facts.

But months ago, the Heritage Foundation published this government index.

This year’s Index of Dependence on Government presented startling findings about the sharp increase of Americans who rely on the federal government for housing, food, income, student aid or other assistance…

Another eye-popping number was the percentage of Americans who don’t pay income taxes, which now accounts for nearly half of the U.S. population. Meanwhile, most of that population receives generous federal benefits.

“One of the most worrying trends in the Index is the coinciding growth in the non-taxpaying public,” wrote Heritage authors Bill Beach and Patrick Tyrrell. “The percentage of people who do not pay federal income taxes, and who are not claimed as dependents by someone who does pay them, jumped from 14.8 percent in 1984 to 49.5 percent in 2009.”…

“This trend should concern everyone who supports America’s republican form of government,” Beach and Tyrrell wrote. “If the citizens’ representatives are elected by an increasing percentage of voters who pay no income tax, how long will it be before these representatives respond more to demands for yet more entitlements and subsidies from non-payers than to the pleas of taxpayers to exercise greater spending prudence?”

So the narrative went, all week, from whether Romney should back off this kind of talk to whether he should “double down” on it, which became a very unoriginal media mantra (sorry for the redundant statement).

He did not back off.

For which he took heat from sympathizers.

But the president had a bad week as well, and leaving aside the Middle East for the moment, Obama expressed frustration for not being able to change Washington from the inside.

He also said there was “the thinking that the president is somebody who is all-powerful and can get everything done.”

Thinking to which he contributed in no small part in his 2008 campaign and acceptance speech.

Obama also said he was disappointed he hasn’t been able to change the tone in Washington from the inside, and he said that American voters have to mobilize and put pressure on Congress for real change.

“The most important lesson I’ve learned is that you can’t change Washington from the inside, you can only change it from the outside,” he said. “That’s how I got elected, and that’s how the big accomplishments like Health Care got done because we were able to mobilize the American people to speak out.”

To which Mitt Romney quickly responded.

Romney, campaigning in Sarasota, said that his rival “threw in the white flag of surrender again. He said he can’t change Washington from inside, he can only change it from outside.”

“Well, we are going to give him that chance in November — he is going outside,” Romney said. “I can change Washington; I will change Washington. We will get the job done from the inside. Republicans and Democrats will come together. He can’t do it. His slogan was ‘Yes we can.’ His slogan now is ‘No, I can’t.’”

To be continued…

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Apr 25

It had the air of a new day and new beginning. Even critics in media punditry noticed that.

Or the ones who covered Tuesday’s five state elections and Gov. Mitt Romney’s remarks at the end of the day.

On a symbolic night for his campaign, Mitt Romney returned to New Hampshire to thank his supporters for his all but certain claim on the Republican nomination and to spell out the economic themes that will underpin his fall battle with President Obama.

Four years ago, Obama “dazzled us” with sweeping promises of “hope and change,” Romney said. “But after we came down to earth, after all the celebration and parades, what do we have to show for three and a half years of President Obama?

“Is it easier to make ends meet?” he said, in a riff on presidential candidate Ronald Reagan’s famous query in 1980, “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?”

“Is it easier to sell your home or buy a new one?” he asked, as the sign-waving crowd shouted, “No!” to each consecutive question. “Have you saved what you needed for retirement? Are you making more at your job? Do you have a better chance to get a better job? Do you pay less at the pump?”

Romney capped off by suggesting, “If the answer were ‘yes’ to those questions, then President Obama would be running for re-election based on his record, and rightly so. But because he has failed, he will run a campaign of diversions and distractions and distortions.

“That kind of campaign may have worked at another place and at a different time, but not here and not now,” he said, and borrowing from a Clinton-era slogan, added, “It’s still about the economy, and we’re not stupid.”

It’s time to elevate the political conversation, and the claims to do so for the past four years have been hollow. Lately, the president has campaigned on the politics of class warfare and gender warfare, and it is tiresome.

News roundtables on Tuesday echoed the message that the choice has just been made clear.

Romney also coopted Obama’s “fairness” theme, which the president has invoked to describe the gulf between an over-taxed middle class and under-taxed elite. Romney suggested that fairness could be achieved any number of ways in society under conservative proposals.

“We will stop the unfairness of urban children being denied access to the good schools of their choice,” he said. “… We will stop the unfairness of requiring union workers to contribute to politicians not of their choosing. We will stop the unfairness of government workers getting better pay and benefits than the very taxpayers they serve. And we will stop the unfairness of one generation passing larger and larger debts onto the next.

“…In the America I see, character and choices matter. And education, hard work, and living within our means are valued and rewarded. And poverty will be defeated, not with a government check, but with respect and achievement that’s taught by parents, learned in school, and practiced in the workplace.”

The chattering classes choosing to dwell on a gaffe here or there by any candidate at this point seems small minded. We have major, course-changing, life-altering paths set before us and we have to decide which to take, which worldview best represents leadership of and service to the common good. Anyone who says there’s little or no difference between Gov. Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama is not serious or just not intellectually honest.

Sometimes, I hate politics. I’d rather talk about morals and principles and advancing true human rights, according to the founding documents of the United States and the Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations, before both became so politically hijacked. But politicians use the language and provide the vehicle so we must engage.

Some analyst on television the day after Romney’s primary victories and pivotal speech said approvingly that his speech soared, without touching on things like marriage issues and contraception. And I thought ‘why the heck are you even saying that? Who is making contraception an issue for government, anyway?’

Note to strategists and partisan ‘pundits’ combox trolls: The ‘flip-flopper’ charge against different GOP candidates and especially Gingrich and Romney just don’t work when the candidate flipped one way, which was a conversion to a new way of seeing an issue. If only President Obama would ‘flip’ on the sanctity of life and religious libery issues.

If Gov. Romney is to be his party’s nominee, the time to rally ’round has come, as it did for Democrats in ’08 when Obama pulled away from Hillary Clinton.

Jordan Sekulow is only one of many analysts making the case for social conservatives to embrace Mitt Romney.

With the tremendous differences between the Obama platform and Romney platform, what we need now is clarity.

And the party to have his back.

I hope this year’s election going forward will be more authentic, about the real issues that need immediate attention and the real role and limits of government. We’ll do our part here to cover that.

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