One obvious conclusion is that Mitt
Romney and Rep. Paul Ryan failed to offer viewers details about how they would
fix the economy. Another is that lying about your opponent's record on so
many key issues may fire up your base, but it won't help win over undecided
voters. The convention's theme might have been "The Mendacity
of Hope."
Now the Democrats convene in Charlotte,
North Carolina, with a task of setting the record straight on the many
Republican distortions, while, at the same time, offering a clear vision of how
to move the nation forward. For instance, the false claim by Republicans
that the president has waived the work requirement for welfare. In fact, the
Department of Health and Human Services plan is designed to let states create
alternative strategies aimed at improving employment outcomes by giving the
states more flexibility, as long as they commit to increasing the number of
people leaving welfare for work by 20 percent. If states fail to reach
the target the plan is terminated.
In an effort to court blue-collar white
workers, the Romney campaign has been running a television ad that claims,
"Under Obama's plan, you wouldn't have to work and wouldn't have to train
for a job. They just send you your welfare check." Yet, two
Republican governors that wanted more control over work requirements originally
requested the new policy from the White House, the same waiver then Governor
Romney requested in 2005 along with 28 other governors.
Republicans have also accused President
Obama of cutting Medicare by $716 billion and hurting seniors. But the
president's actions are not cuts, they are only reductions in payments to
insurance companies and health providers, and not to patients. These are
the same Medicare savings Rep. Paul Ryan called for in his budget.
Rep. Ryan also claimed the president
was responsible for the closing of a General Motors plant in his hometown of
Janesville, Wisconsin. But GM announced the closing of the plant before
President Obama was elected and before the president's auto bailout, which is
credited with saving the industry.
“It began with a perfect AAA credit
rating for the United States. It ends with the downgraded America.” With those
words, Rep. Ryan also blamed the president for the downgrading of the U.S.
credit rating. But the credit rating was downgraded because Congress would
not pass a debt-ceiling bill so the government could pay for money it had
already spent. Republicans in Congress held the debt-ceiling hostage in
exchange for deep spending cuts. They took America to the fiscal
brink. In lowering the credit rating, Standard and Poor's said, “the
political brinkmanship of recent months highlights what we see as America’s
governance and policy making becoming less stable, less effective and less
predictable than what we previously believed."
Rep. Ryan also attacked the president
for his handling of the deficit. “He created a new bipartisan debt
commission,” Mr. Ryan said. “They came back with an urgent report. He thanked
them, sent them on their way and then did exactly nothing.” Mr. Ryan
failed to point out he served on the commission and opposed their final
proposals, which included some tax increases. His opposition was a major
blow to enactment of any of its proposals. This is the same Mr. Ryan who claimed to run a marathon in less than three hours, a remarkable feat. Now he admits that claim is not true.
Republicans say the president's
stimulus package did not work. Yet most economists say that the stimulus
package kept America from entering a second Great Depression. And since
President Obama took office, in the depths of the Bush Recession, the U.S. economy
has added more than four million private sector jobs. Economic growth
remains anemic, but the world is still in the grips of a global recession.
The president was accused of conducting
an "apology tour" for U.S. foreign policy. Yet the president
has never apologized for America. In fact, when he received his Nobel
Peace Prize, President Obama defended American foreign policy. Meanwhile,
the president made getting Osama bin-Laden a top priority and his policies have
decimated the al-Quada terrorist organization.
From the first day of Barack Obama's presidency Republicans, including Rep. Ryan, plotted a strategy to win back the White House in 2012. Denounce, delay, deny, divide, and deceive. So deep is their dislike of President Obama, that many accuse him of being a socialist, a Muslim, lying about being born in Hawaii, and about his grade point average in college.
We are, indeed, at a crossroads. In November, will voters reward those who will do and say anything to get elected? Or will they side with hope and change?
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