25
   

Mitt Romney...what are his policies?

 
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 15 Mar, 2012 02:53 pm
@panzade,
They like funny first names, these Romneys. Seems like the people have dog names and the dogs have people names.
0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Thu 15 Mar, 2012 05:51 pm
Democrats jumped on Romney's campaign promise to "get rid of" Planned Parenthood in order to help balance the budget.

Quote:
“Is the program so critical that it is worth borrowing money from China to pay for it?” Romney asked. “And on that basis, of course you get rid of ObamaCare, that’s the easy one. But there are others: Planned Parenthood, we’re going to get rid of that. The subsidy for Amtrak, I would eliminate that. The National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, both excellent programs, but we can’t afford to borrow money to pay for these things.”


The fact that PP isn't even a federal program didn't seem to bother anyone in Romney's camp.
More and more he is scootching to Santorum's right as the campaign issues move from the economy to social issues
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 15 Mar, 2012 08:26 pm
@panzade,
The barbarians are storming the gates!!!
0 Replies
 
jcboy
 
  1  
Reply Sun 13 May, 2012 07:57 am
Yesterday, Romney was a graduation speaker at the University founded by Falwell . True to form as a double talking idiot, Romney was telling (an) audience what they wanted to hear; basically a hateful, bigoted message (against same -sex marriage) tinged with the self-righteous Christian diatribe! As far as Jerry goes, Hell is a perfect place for his eternity
0 Replies
 
revelette
 
  2  
Reply Tue 15 May, 2012 06:38 am
Romney Is Short on Specifics
Republicans say they're eager for the presidential campaign to turn away from "distractions" and focus instead on the economy. Someone should warn them that if they're not careful, they might get their wish.

It is true that voters' unhappiness with high unemployment and slow growth poses a challenge for President Obama as he seeks re-election. But for Mitt Romney and the GOP to take advantage of this potential opening, they'll have to do more than chant the word "economy" like a mantra. They have to make the case that their policies will work better than Obama's.

And what might Romney's proposed economic policies be? Why, they're basically the same as those of George W. Bush, only worse.

Just as Obama owns the recession and the slow recovery, Bush owns the financial crisis that sent the slumping economy over a cliff. But for all his sins -- the gratuitous tax cuts, the off-budget wars, the defiance of basic arithmetic -- Bush at least demonstrated a certain empathy for Americans who struggle to make ends meet. One of his budget-busting initiatives, for example, was expanding Medicare to cover prescription drugs without worrying about how this much-needed new benefit would be paid for.

It's safe to predict that Romney would never make such a gesture out of compassion for the beleaguered middle class. To this day, he refuses to take back his criticism of Obama for bailing out General Motors and Chrysler -- even though letting the companies fail would have meant the extinction of the U.S. auto industry and the elimination of hundreds of thousands of jobs.

It is a measure of Romney's ideological stubbornness that even with Chrysler rebounding under new ownership and GM reporting record profits, he still insists that his view -- let the companies go bankrupt so the "creative destruction" of capitalism could work its magic -- was correct.

Romney is something of an expert on creative destruction, I guess, having orchestrated a good deal of it while running the private-equity firm Bain Capital. The Obama campaign recently released an ad about one of Bain's less successful acquisitions, a small steel mill in Kansas City called GST Steel.

The company, which was more than 100 years old, failed after a decade under Bain's ownership; GST's 750 employees lost their jobs, pensions and health benefits. Bain, however, made money, investing $8 million in the company and taking out $4 million in profits and $4.5 million in management fees. The Romney campaign contends that GST, with its unionized workforce, could not compete with cheap foreign steel being dumped on the market. The Obama campaign alleges that Bain burdened GST with crushing debt while sucking the company's coffers dry.

Is this the genius of free markets at work, or is it "vulture capitalism" run amok? Let's have that argument. Please.

Let's also have a long, detailed discussion of Romney's economic plans versus Obama's. Romney wants to make tax rates for the wealthy even lower than they are now; Obama wants a small increase for those making more than $1 million a year, whom he challenges to pay "their fair share." Romney's entire economic plan, basically, involves tax cuts and deregulation -- in other words, a repeat of the Bush-era policies that led to the crisis.

Does Romney have any fresh ideas? Well, when he was governor of Massachusetts, he was smart enough to see that universal health coverage would not only improve the lives of the uninsured but also help rein in runaway medical costs. He found the solution in an innovative idea developed in Republican-leaning think tanks: an individual health insurance mandate.

It worked. In fact, it was Romney's greatest policy success as a public official. But now he doesn't talk about it much.

My guess is that Republicans won't want to talk about the past or the future in much detail. They'd like to keep things blurry, so that we only see Romney in broad outline: a successful businessman who'll put us back in business. For details, we'll mail you the prospectus.

I can't help but think of the "prosperity theology" movement, or scam, in which preachers convince congregants that God's will is for Christians to be rich -- and that the way to become rich is to put lots of money in the collection plate. It's not believable unless the preacher looks and acts the part. Maybe he lives in a mansion. Maybe his wife drives "a couple of Cadillacs."

Actually, it's not believable even then.
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 15 May, 2012 06:45 am
@dlowan,
Quote:
Mitt Romney...what are his policies?


Adult supervision of the US govt. The basic cold, hard reality is that the US govt. involves too much power not to have it under adult supervision.
revelette
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 May, 2012 06:47 am
@gungasnake,
In other words, you don't know either.
0 Replies
 
JeffreyEqualityNewma
 
  1  
Reply Thu 7 Jun, 2012 06:56 pm
Romney's strategy with Trump is one of "social engineering". What Mitt Romney gets out of this TEMPORARY relationship is a few upward points with Evangelical Christians who might now be tempted to overlook his Mormonism and see him as more of an "American Christian" than Obama... What Donald Trump gets out of this venture is membership in the boys club... a chance to brush himself off and still feel like a player in the game... Which is VERY important to someone with an ego like his.
0 Replies
 
jcboy
 
  1  
Reply Fri 31 Jan, 2014 05:12 pm
Oh please your 15 minutes are up. Go whine and cry someplace else!

Ann Romney: 'The Country Lost' By Not Having Mitt Romney As President

Quote:
One week after a documentary was released chronicling her husband's 2012 presidential campaign, Ann Romney again reflected back on Mitt Romney's loss, pointing a finger at America in the process.

In a Friday interview with Fox News, Ann said that while the election ended more than a year ago, she routinely runs into people who are "still really sad" that President Barack Obama won a second term in office.

"We lost, but truly the country lost by not having Mitt as president," Ann Romney told Fox.

Despite that feeling, Romney added that her husband is not considering another go-round at the presidency. Asked about a poll that showed Mitt as an early New Hampshire front-runner for the 2016 election, she said "no, we're not up for doing this again."

Ann's remarks paralleled those of Mitt two weeks earlier. Asked by the New York Times if he wanted to run for president again, Romney had a resounding answer.

“Oh, no, no, no. No, no, no, no, no. No, no, no," he told the paper. "People are always gracious and say, ‘Oh, you should run again.’ I’m not running again."

0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

 
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.03 seconds on 12/30/2024 at 09:53:55