ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Ill. — Republican Mitt Romney accused President
Barack Obama on Tuesday of ditching a long-standing work requirement for
welfare recipients, accusing him of fostering a “culture of dependency” and
backing up the charge with a new television commercial.
White House
press secretary Jay Carney said the allegations were “blatantly dishonest ...
hypocrisy knows no bounds.” He added that Romney, while serving as
Massachusetts governor, had once petitioned the White House to loosen
employment rules for those on welfare.
Romney made
his accusation in a relatively rare occurrence in the race for the White House
— an appearance before voters outside the small group of battleground states
likely to settle the Nov. 6 election.
Illinois and
its 20 electoral votes are politically safe territory for Obama in the fall.
Romney was there for a fundraiser as well as a stop at a manufacturing company,
part of the intense competition between the two candidates to stockpile cash
for the stretch run to Election Day.
Romney
picked up more than $2 million during his swing through Chicago, and another
fundraising evening in West Des Moines, Iowa, gave him at least another $1.8
million.
The
president was speaking at two private events, one of them a fundraiser, at a hotel
a few blocks from the White House. And after being outraised by Romney in
recent months, his campaign announced a fundraising “shoot-around” and dinner
in New York on Aug. 22 featuring several professional basketball stars.
In a race as
close as this one, the taunts were getting personal.
Romney,
interviewed on Fox News, said Obama was “saying things that are not accurate”
when it comes to taxes. He referred to a crack the president made on Monday
night as “Obama-loney,” rhyming it with baloney.
At a fundraiser,
Obama called Romney’s tax plan Robin Hood in reverse — “Romney Hood” — and
repeated his accusation that it would mean tax breaks for the wealthiest
Americans while forcing the middle class to pay the IRS as much as $2,000 more
a year.
The president
wants to extend tax breaks due to expire at all income levels, except above
$200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for a couple. He has made his proposal
central to a pitch to middle- and working-class voters as he seeks a second
term with unemployment at 8.3 percent.
Romney wants
to keep the tax cuts in place at all income levels, and has proposed an
additional 20 percent reduction in rates.
Romney’s
decision to introduce the welfare issue into the campaign seemed aimed at
blue-collar, white working-class voters in a weak economy, and suggested that
Obama might be gaining ground politically with his position on taxes.
It also
marked an attempt to take the gloss off the recent announcement that former
President Bill Clinton will have a prime-time speaking slot at the Democratic
National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. early next month.
Appearing
before hundreds of supporters at a manufacturing plant near Chicago, Obama’s
hometown, the Republican challenger said bipartisan legislation signed into law
by Clinton in 1996 “reformed welfare to encourage people to work. They did not
want a culture of dependency to continue to grow in our country,” he said of
the then-president and Congress, under Republican control at the time.
He said
that, just recently, Obama “has tried to reverse that accomplishment by taking
the work requirement out of welfare. That is wrong, and If I’m president, I’ll
put work back in welfare. ...We will end a culture of dependency and restore a
culture of good, hard work,” he said.
Romney’s new
ad buttressed the point.
“Under Obama’s plan
you wouldn’t have to work and wouldn’t have to train for a job. They just send
you a welfare check, and welfare to work goes back to being plan old welfare,”
the announcer says in the commercial.
“Mitt Romney will
restore the work requirement.”
Under the
law signed by Clinton and amended a decade later, the federal government does
not provide a guaranteed benefit to welfare recipients. Instead, the states
receive federal funds and are permitted to establish a variety of programs to
benefit the poor. The government imposes a limit on the length of time families
can receive aid and requires recipients eventually to go to work.
The Romney
campaign circulated material during the day that quoted Obama, then a state senator
in Illinois, as saying he “probably would have voted against it” if he had been
in Congress.
The Obama
administration recently announced plans to issue waivers to states that wanted
“to test alternative and innovative strategies, policies and procedures” to
improve employment among needy families. It said it was acting after receiving
requests from some of the nation’s governors, including Republicans in Utah and
Nevada. But senior GOP lawmakers attacked the move as an attempt to undermine
the welfare-to-work requirements in effect for more than a decade.
Officials
with access to detailed advertising information said it appeared the commercial
was airing at heavy levels in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, North Carolina, New
Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio and Virginia — states where the race is closest.
Romney was
himself targeted with a new ad during the day, this one launched by Priorities
USA Action, a super PAC that supports Obama.
It features
a former Kansas City steelworker who says his company was taken over in 1993 by
a group that included Bain Capital, the private equity firm co-founded by
Romney.
“When Mitt Romney and
Bain closed the plant, I lost my health care, and my family lost their health
care,” he said. His wife became ill, but “I think maybe she didn’t say anything
because she knew we couldn’t afford the insurance,” he says. By the time she
went to the hospital, she was diagnosed with cancer and died quickly, he said.
“I do not think Mitt
Romney realizes what he’s done to anyone, and furthermore I do not think Mitt
Romney is concerned.”
In response,
Ryan Williams, a spokesman for Romney, said Obama’s allies “continue to use
discredited and dishonest attacks in a contemptible effort to conceal the
administration’s deplorable economic record.”
Both parties
were fleshing out the speaking schedule for their conventions.
Republicans
said Romney’s most persistent primary rival, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick
Santorum, would have a turn at the speaker’s podium. So, too, former Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a tea party favorite.
Former
President Jimmy Carter will tape a video message to be aired in prime time at
the Democratic convention.
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