Mitt Romney promised Thursday that his economic program will create
12 million new jobs in the next four years, and likened President Barack Obama
to a "dog trying to chase its tail" when it comes to strengthening
the sluggish recovery.
Firing back
instantly, Obama said his rival favors "trickle-down fairy dust" that
has failed to fix the economy in the past, and unleashed a new television ad
with a scathing summation of Romney's tax plans: "He pays less. You pay
more."
The two men
campaigned in battleground states hundreds of miles apart, the incumbent in
Florida, his challenger in Colorado, both on a mission to convert undecided
voters to their side in a race dominated by the economy and high joblessness.
Nor was
there any summer lull in the television ad wars. Americans For Prosperity, an
independent group that backs Romney, intends to launch a $25 million ad
campaign beginning next week, according to officials familiar with the
arrangements. The organization was founded by David and Charles Koch,
billionaire brothers, and has spent about $15 million in swing states this year
on ads attacking Obama.
For Romney,
the day meant a return to domestic campaigning after a weeklong overseas trip.
Aides say he intends to disclose a vice presidential pick before the Republican
National Convention opens on Aug. 27 in Tampa, Fla., but the former
Massachusetts governor told reporters: "I've got nothing to give you"
by way of information on his decision.
Instead, he
unveiled what aides called Romney's plan for more jobs and more take-home pay,
backed by an eight-page paper arguing that the economic stimulus and other
policies backed by Obama "exacerbated the economy's structural problems
and weakened the recovery ... At the present rate of job creation, the nation
will never return to full employment," it said, on the eve of the release
of the government's official report on July joblessness.
Friday's
jobs report, Obama planned to use the backdrop of the White House and surround
himself with families who would benefit from the election year middle-class tax
cut he's pushing Congress to adopt. "As dysfunctional as Washington can
be, this fight is far from hopeless," White House senior adviser David
Plouffe said in an email.
In remarks
in Golden, Colo., Romney said his economic policies would lead to creation of
12 million jobs in the four years of his term, if he is elected, and help make
North America energy independent, a pledge that aides said included Canada and
Mexico as well as the United States.
Romney
pledged expanded international trade, particularly with Latin America, and
vowed to confront China over its own policies. "I'm finally going to sit
down with the Chinese and they're going to understand that if they cheat there
are going to be consequences, because we're not going to let them walk all over
us," the former Massachusetts governor said.
He said he
would help small business owners, improve the education system and cut spending
to reduce the deficit, but he offered relatively few specifics.
Romney
previously has said he wants to extend the tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31
and grant a new 20 percent cut in tax rates, in addition, to stimulate growth.
He has also said he will reverse some of Obama's proposed defense cuts, and
simultaneously reduce spending on other programs in a way that deficits would
gradually subside.
But he so
far has refused to identify which existing tax breaks he would curtail to
accomplish his goals, and generally avoided naming individual programs he wants
to cut or eliminate.
In his
remarks during the day, Romney said he wants federal education funds that aid
the disadvantaged and disabled to be tied to the student rather than flow to
school districts, as is now the case. But he did not specify how much he would
cut from them to achieve his goal of reducing federal deficits.
He also
criticized Obama for signing legislation that cut $500 billion from Medicare
over a decade. Aides said he would restore the funding, which was reduced as part
of the president's health care bill. But they had no additional details.
Romney said
Democrats have a different view. "They think we should just raise taxes.
...The problem is when you raise taxes you lower growth," he said.
Obama's
approach is "like a dog trying to chase its tail, you just don't ever get
there," he added. "So the right answer is not to raise taxes. The
right answer is to cut taxes and cut spending."
Obama and
other Democrats support extending existing tax cuts except for individuals
making more than $200,000 a year and couples with incomes over $250,000—and
their disagreement with Romney and the Republicans on this point has emerged as
arguably the most fundamental one of the campaign.
It's an
argument that Obama seems eager to have—using campaign appearances and paid
television advertising to do so.
For the
second day in a row, Obama cited a study by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center
that says Romney and other millionaires would receive a tax cut of
approximately $250,000 a year if the former Massachusetts governor gets his
way.
"This
analysis also found that if Gov. Romney wants to keep his word" about
reducing deficits, "the average middle-class family with children would be
stuck with a tax increase of more than $2,000," he added.
The
president's new campaign ad was delivering the same highly personalized
message. It says Romney has paid a lower proportion of his income in taxes than
many people of lesser means and adds:
"He
pays less, you pay more," the ad says.
Romney's personal
wealth has been estimated as high as $250 million, but he has not so far made
public a detailed disclosure of his holdings. His aides have sought to dismiss
the report as a partisan attack by former aides to the president.
But Obama,
picking up on what his own campaign staff said Wednesday, told an audience near
Orlando, Fla., that the Tax Policy Center was headed by a former aide to
President George W. Bush.
Romney, too,
rolled out a new ad, giving a less-than-warm welcome to Obama on a day Air Force
One touched down in Florida. It notes that the state still suffers from high
unemployment, record home foreclosures and an increase in poverty.
"Barack
Obama: What a disappointment," it says.
The
president's stop in Florida reflected his campaign's efforts to build support
among Hispanic voters, particularly Puerto Ricans. He was greeted on the tarmac
of Orlando International Airport by Kenneth McClintock, the lieutenant governor
of Puerto Rico and Alejandro Garcia-Padilla, a state senator in Puerto Rico.
Romney,
meanwhile, appeared with a group of Republican governors at an event near
Aspen, Colo., some of them mentioned as potential running mates. That teased
speculation about Romney's vice presidential pick, as some of the attendees—New
Jersey's Chris Christie, Louisiana's Bobby Jindal, South Carolina's Nikki Haley
and Virginia's Bob McDonnell—have been mentioned as possible Romney running
mates.
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