Mitt Romney releases
jobs plan as he faces a surging Rick Perry
September
06, 2011|By Michael Finnegan, Los Angeles Times
The
former Massachusetts governor calls President Obama's ideas outdated, a 'pay-phone
strategy' in a 'smartphone world.' But Romney's 59-point agenda is dismissed by
his GOP rivals. Facing new trouble in his quest for the Republican presidential
nomination, Mitt Romney released a detailed plan Tuesday to revive the nation's
stumbling economy, proposing tax cuts and rollbacks in environmental, health
and banking rules.
Romney's
59-point agenda came two days before President Obama plans to unveil his own
proposals to combat the nation's stubbornly high joblessness, a pivotal step in
his reelection campaign. Speaking to invited guests at a truck dealership in
North Las Vegas, Romney said Obama "just doesn't have a clue what to
do" to revive the economy. The former Massachusetts governor described
Obama's ideas as outdated.
"Your
pay-phone strategy does not work in a smartphone world," Romney said. Romney,
former chief executive of the Bain Capital investment firm, brandished a blue
paperback copy of his plan, "Believe in America." "This is the
product of somebody who spent his life in the private sector," he told the
crowd.
Romney
put out his plan amid a raft of new polls that show he has lost his presumptive
Republican front-runner status in recent days to Texas Gov. Rick Perry. A
debate of the party's White House contenders on Wednesday at the Reagan
Presidential Library in Simi Valley is supposed to be the first to include
Perry, if wildfires in Texas don't keep him from attending.
The
growing rivalry between Perry and the field's former front-runner was on
display Tuesday with Romney's pointed reference to his own business background
— Perry has spent decades in government — and as the Texas governor's campaign
denounced Romney's jobs plan. "As governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney
failed to create a pro-jobs environment and failed to institute many of the
reforms he now claims to support," Perry spokesman Mark Miner said in a
statement. Romney's 160-page plan fit mainstream conservative doctrine. He
called for cutting the corporate income tax rate from 35% to 25%, eliminating
the estate tax and extending personal income tax cuts enacted under President
George W. Bush. He proposed a 10% cut in the federal workforce and a
$200-billion-per-year reduction in the Medicaid healthcare program for the
poor. Romney would convert Medicaid into a block grant for states.
Romney's
plan included a harsh critique of Obama's economic record that in some cases
ignored steps by Obama that have disappointed Democrats. Romney slammed the
president for his "costly and ineffective anti-carbon agenda" despite
criticism by former Vice President Al Gore and others that Obama had failed to
show leadership in fighting global warming.
Ben
LaBolt, an Obama campaign spokesman, said Romney's plan "would tip the
scales against hardworking Americans." Romney "repackaged the same
old policies that helped create the economic crisis: boosting oil company
profits and allowing Wall Street to write its own rules, more tax breaks for
large corporations and more tax cuts for the wealthiest while working Americans
are forced to carry a greater burden," he said. Romney's plan was also
denounced by the campaign of former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., a Republican
presidential contender who released similar proposals last week. Americans
"should hope that Gov. Romney's plan builds on exactly the opposite of
what he did in Massachusetts, where he raised corporate fees and taxes and
passed a government healthcare plan that includes mandates and fines on small
businesses and job creators," said Matt David, Huntsman's campaign manager.
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