Who do you want for president – a criminal or an insane criminal?
BLOOMBERG:
Mitt Romney Just Lost The Election
The
reaction to Mitt Romney's private remarks about the 47 percent of
Americans who don't pay income taxes has been brutal and swift.
17
September, 2012
Romney
apparently made
the remarks at a private dinner for rich donors.
In
the remarks, Romney went much farther than suggesting that the
federal tax base should be broadened, a sentiment that many Americans
agree with (including, for what it's worth, me).
Romney
said almost half the voters in the country — 47 percent — believe
they are "victims" and expect the government to provide
free health care, food, and housing.
He
then said of these people, "I'll never convince them that they
should take personal responsibility and care for their lives."
- More than half of are working Americans who pay payroll taxes, meaning that they have jobs and provide money to the federal government.
- Half of the rest are elderly people who collect Social Security, which isn't taxed as income.
- Almost all of the rest are people who make less than $20,000 per year.
In
Romney's view, apparently, all of these people are freeloaders who
don't take responsibility for themselves.
Romney
was already falling far behind in the polls, but some observers
believe that these remarks will cost him the election.
You
can mark my prediction now: A secret recording from a
closed-door Mitt
Romney fundraiser,
released today by
David Corn at Mother Jones, has killed Mitt Romney's campaign for
president.
On
the tape, Romney explains that his electoral strategy involves
writing off nearly half the country as unmovable Obama voters. As
Romney explains, 47 percent of Americans "believe that they are
victims." He laments: "I'll never convince them they should
take personal responsibility and care for their lives."
So
what's the upshot? "My job is not to worry about those people,"
he says...
This
is an utter disaster for Romney.
Romney
already has trouble relating to the public and convincing people he
cares about them. Now, he's been caught on video saying that nearly
half the country consists of hopeless losers.
Romney
has been vigorously denying President Obama's claims that his tax
plan would raise taxes on the middle class. Now, he's been caught on
video suggesting that low- and middle-income Americans are
undertaxed.
After
the remarks came to light, the Romney
campaign released a statement saying
that Romney "wants to help all Americans" and that "he
is concerned about the growing number of people who are dependent on
the federal government."
If
he's concerned, it certainly doesn't sound like it. ("My job is
not to worry about those people...")
One
defense of Romney's remarks is that he didn't really mean what he
said--that he was just sucking up to rich donors and telling them
what they wanted to hear. Another defense is that Romney was just
saying what a lot of people in his "base" believe.
Neither
of those defenses sound much better than the remarks themselves.
Good Riddance!
ReplyDelete