The Essence of the Romney-Ryan Campaign: Blind Trust

The entire Romney-Ryan campaign boils down to two essential points:

Really; yesterday the RR campaign came out and said it could not divulge precise policy proposals, like what tax deductions might be eliminated to balance the budget, because Democrats are mean. Angry Black Lady writes,

The Obama campaign, on the one hand, has got all these different tools that you can use to figure out how Obama’s policies will affect you: as a woman, for example, (The Life of Julia) or as a taxpayer (you can calculate your tax rate with his nifty tax calculator).

Romney and Ryan, on the other hand, have no nifty tools — Whiteboard of Fail, notwithstanding — and are willing to tell voters exactly two things: Jack and Shit.

R and R argue that if they released details of what they plan to do, those awful Democrats would just demagogue them. You know — like the Republicans relentlessly demagogue President Obama’s record and policies, because hate and lies are all they have to run on.

Four years ago the Obama campaign web site, which I actually read pretty carefully, had page after page after page after page of details on how they proposed to achieve their various campaign promises. And, um, they won.

(And the Obama Administration actually stuck to most of those details as closely as Congress allowed. Those who perpetually whine about how Obama sold them out obviously never read the website and mistook Obama for the Progressive Utopia Fairy.)

Basically, they’re asking us to put the nation into a blind trust that the Right will manage. And while they won’t tell us how they will invest our money, they are promising the equivalent of a 300 percent return with no risk.

Part of me is looking forward to the Republican convention. Seriously. The Republicans have figured out they can’t make Romney lovable, so the theme of the convention is going to be professionalism. They’re going to emphasize Mitt’s business background (leaving out Bain Capital?) to argue that Mitt just knows how to take care of money stuff, so we should let him be president.

To me, this sounds like they are veering awfully close to the Michael Dukakis line — “This election isn’t about ideology. It’s about competence.” I happened to like that line at the time, but it seems to have fallen flat with most Americans. And, of course, this election is precisely about ideology, and I have no doubt the convention participants are not going to let America forget that.

It’s going to be the Mother of All Clown Shows, in other words. America will be treated to four days of unhinged baggerism, and then Mitt is going to take the stage and proclaim he is a serious adult professional and we should just trust him to know what he’s doing. Yeah, that should work.

Update:
Somebody set up a Romney’s White Board site. This one’s my favorite (although it took me a few seconds) —

Update: If you are feeling discouraged, read Nate Silver, Why I’m Not Buying the Romney Rally.

Here’s Your Chains, Mitt

Via Annie Laurie

From the New York Times

Four days after his announcement as Mitt Romney’s running mate, Representative Paul D. Ryan was not in Florida talking Medicare with elderly voters or in drought-ridden Iowa talking about a farm bill. He traveled to the Venetian hotel here for a meeting hosted by Sheldon Adelson, the billionaire casino mogul who has pledged to spend as much as $100 million this year to defeat President Obama.

Ryan had to get the blessings of The Godfather, who already has spent more than $50 million in this 2012 campaign to defeat President Obama.

In keeping with Mr. Adelson’s penchant for staying below the radar, Romney aides refused to say who attended the meeting with Mr. Ryan, though the location (a private room at one of Mr. Adelson’s hotels) and leaks from the Romney camp left little doubt. And in keeping with laws that prohibit elected officials from explicitly asking donors for super PAC money, aides to Mr. Romney insisted before the event that the meeting was not a fund-raiser.

Yes, I’m sure that in this secret meeting everyone played by the rules. (/snark)

Monte Miller, a longtime Republican donor who planned to attend, described it as an opportunity for major contributors and influential Las Vegas Republicans to size up Mr. Ryan.

“I’ve watched Ryan for the last few years,” Mr. Miller said. “I think I know what he’s going to bring. But I haven’t been in the same room as him. I want to see his charisma and communication skills.”

Annie Laurie: “Dance, little monkey, dance!”

It’s beyond farce that so many people support these clowns in the name of “liberty.”

Sixteen Tons

Scoot over to Charles Pierce’s place and take a good, long look at the photograph of Mittens with some Ohio coal miners. This is a great photo. Look closely at the expressions on the miners’ faces. Look at their posture and their hands. Compare/contrast their work garb with Mittens’s white white white shirt. Look at the discomfort written on Mitt’s face.

I say we’re looking at some working-class men who are not wild about Mittens. I wonder if the photo was taken before or after Mitt addressed the miners and called the mine owner a “great boss.”

I grew up around miners; in the world of mining, there is no such thing as a “great boss.” There are tolerable bosses; there are bosses the mine workers may be ambivalent about; yes. Those are the “good” bosses. But no miner ever born has gushed with love for the guy who signs his paycheck.

And there’s this —

“His vice-president,” Romney told the miners, “said that coal kills more people than terrorists. Can you imagine that?”

Leaving out 2011, which was an exceptional year for terrorism — from 2002 to 2011, 306 American coal miners were killed on the job. That’s an average of 34 coal miners a year. How many American civilians were killed by terrorists in those years?

Miners know about those mine deaths. So, yeah, I think they can imagine that.

And did you know black lung disease is making a comeback? I can’t find data on how many coal miners are dying from black lung lately, just that it’s showing up more often in younger miners. But this NPR report says that since 1970, “black lung contributed to the deaths of more than 70,000 miners.” So that beats 9/11 pretty handily.

The boss of these particular coal miners is named Robert Murray. Peg McCentee writes for the Salt Lake City Tribune:

Maybe Romney was too busy running for president in 2007 to notice that Murray’s Crandall Canyon coal mine collapsed twice in 2007, killing six miners and three would-be rescuers. Or that Murray claimed an earthquake caused the first failure even when seismologists determined it did not.

Or that the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration issued a report a year later finding that Genwal Resources, a Murray Energy Corp. subsidiary, was operating under three findings of high “negligence” in three of its Crandall mining plan elements and with “reckless disregard” in three others.

Perhaps it also did not come to the candidate’s attention that earlier this year an outraged federal judge fined Genwal just $500,000 for the disaster — all that the law would allow.

The victims’ families were devastated.

Murray’s behavior during the Crandall Canyon recovery effort bewildered many observers and family members: he bragged about his private jet, yelled at those families and decried the notion of global climate change.

Murray is a big Romney supporter, and I take it he and Romney traveled together from a fundraiser in West Virginia to tour Murray’s Century mine in Ohio. There’s where he told the Century miners that Murray is a “great boss.” I’m sure those fellas know exactly what sort of boss Murray is.

Then Romney used the same group of miners as a prop, standing in front of them to deliver a speech about how President Obama’s energy policies are costing jobs, although I can’t find any data to indicate that is true. The numbers on coal mine employment I could find were not recent enough to know if there is any significant change in coal mine employment numbers during the Obama Administration. The coal mining industry doesn’t employ nearly as many people as it did 20 and more years ago, but that’s mostly because of changes in mining technology and making the miners work longer hours (one reason black lung is on the rise).

But just look at the miners in this photo, while Mittens was speaking. Be sure to click on the photo to enlarge it. See the body language, the posture, the folded arms, the frowns. Folded arms don’t always signify resistance or defiance, but folded arms with sullen expressions tells me that whatever Mittens is selling, they ain’t buying.

Paul Ryan’s Bizarro America

You know the nation has gone off the rails when you want people to listen to the sensible voice of … David Stockman?

The Ryan Plan boils down to a fetish for cutting the top marginal income-tax rate for “job creators” — i.e. the superwealthy — to 25 percent and paying for it with an as-yet-undisclosed plan to broaden the tax base. Of the $1 trillion in so-called tax expenditures that the plan would attack, the vast majority would come from slashing popular tax breaks for employer-provided health insurance, mortgage interest, 401(k) accounts, state and local taxes, charitable giving and the like, not to mention low rates on capital gains and dividends. The crony capitalists of K Street already own more than enough Republican votes to stop that train before it leaves the station.

In short, Mr. Ryan’s plan is devoid of credible math or hard policy choices. And it couldn’t pass even if Republicans were to take the presidency and both houses of Congress. Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan have no plan to take on Wall Street, the Fed, the military-industrial complex, social insurance or the nation’s fiscal calamity and no plan to revive capitalist prosperity — just empty sermons.

Of course, the op ed also contains old-school Reaganomic nonsense, like prattling about the “welfare state.” As pm carpenter says,

Stockman is gun-shy, and it’s hard to fault him. He experienced firsthand his party’s embryonic descent into fiscal madness and he emerged from that mortifying encounter incubating irrational fears of all deficits and essentially all modern economic management. He is the ideological equivalent of the old Trotskyites turned communist witch-hunters.

(Note to any wingnuts or baggers, tea or fire, who come by here — carpenter is not calling anyone a communist. It’s an analogy.)

Michael Waldholz writes in Forbes,

Having covered U.S. economic policy as a reporter and editor for over three decades, where I had to rely on facts, documentation and experience based evidence – not wishful thinking — it is clear to me that the Ryan approach is hogwash. Hogwash topped with rhetorical whipped cream, but hogwash just the same. And any prolonged conversation about solving Medicare that includes the Ryan plan is a distraction designed to burnish Romney/Ryan as staunch conservative capitalists. It is not a legitimate way forward.

I don’t agree with all of Waldholz’s ideas expressed in his column, either, but at least he sees that there is no substance to Ryan’s plan. But how do we get across to the people that Ryan is a fraud? And that Ryan’s “plan” is not even a bad idea, but merely a facade of an idea, with no serious thought behind it? Krugman writes,

So, let me clarify what I believe is really going on in the choice of Paul Ryan as VP nominee. It is not about satisfying the conservative base, which was motivated anyway by Obama-hatred; it is not about refocusing on the issues, because R&R are both determined to avoid providing any of the crucial specifics about their plans. It is — as Jonathan Chait also seems to understand — about exploiting the gullibility and vanity of the news media, in much the same way that George W. Bush did in 2000.

Like Bush in 2000, Ryan has a completely undeserved reputation in the media as a bluff, honest guy, in Ryan’s case supplemented by a reputation as a serious policy wonk. None of this has any basis in reality; Ryan’s much-touted plan, far from being a real solution, relies crucially on stuff that is just pulled out of thin air — huge revenue increases from closing unspecified loopholes, huge spending cuts achieved in ways not mentioned. See Matt Miller for more.

So whence comes the Ryan reputation? As I said in my last post, it’s because many commentators want to tell a story about US politics that makes them feel and look good — a story in which both parties are equally at fault in our national stalemate, and in which said commentators stand above the fray. This story requires that there be good, honest, technically savvy conservative politicians, so that you can point to these politicians and say how much you admire them, even if you disagree with some of their ideas; after all, unless you lavish praise on some conservatives, you don’t come across as nobly even-handed.

So mainstream media is, for the most part, describing Ryan as an “intellectual” and a “wonk” who can crunch numbers to within an inch of their life, when in fact his famous budget could have been crafted by Mrs. Holbrook’s sixth grade remedial math class at PS 102. Oh, and the business about Ryan being a regular middle-class guy from a small town in Wisconsin is a crock, too. See Charles Pierce, “The Ryan Family’s History of Fakery” and “The Paul Ryan Origin Story Is a Heaping Pile.”

Let us now go to two opposing views, one from Paul Nocera and the other from Digby. Nocera says that the stark difference between the policy proposals of Romney-Ryan and Obama-Biden “creates the potential for the country to have the debate, in a national election, that it needs to have about the size and role of the federal government.” Then he says,

Ryan’s budget plan would reduce the size of government from the current 24 percent of gross domestic product to around 20 percent of G.D.P. The ax would fall most heavily on programs for the poor. As the opinion writer Matt Miller put it recently in The Washington Post, “Over time, Ryan’s ‘vision’ would decimate most federal activities beyond Social Security, Medicare and defense.”

Simply dismissing these ideas as crazy is a mistake. There are many people in the country who agree with Ryan — as they showed two years ago, when they elected 87 Republican freshmen, many of them Tea Party-backed political novices, to the House of Representatives, who went to Washington vowing to shrink the federal government.

Digby disagrees, saying,

This is cowardly writing, and Nocera knows it. What he actualy seems to be saying is, “Ryan’s ideas are screaming yellow bonkers, but a lot of people voted for them.” In other words, Nocera’s saying that it’s not crazy to dismiss these crazy ideas – they are, after all, you know, nuts, as David Stockman trenchantly describes on the same page – but we should be aware that lots of people have voted for them and therefore we should pay attention to the ideas and discuss them.

I’m firmly in between these positions. I agree with Digby it’s a huge mistake to discuss Paul Ryan’s budget as if it were a serious policy proposal, because it isn’t. But if you read Nocera’s entire column, and put the quote above in context, I don’t think that is what he is proposing.

How I read it is that for year after year movement conservatives have won elections by running against the allegedly wasteful and bloated and too big federal government, and the too many pigs allegedly feeding at the entitlement trough. Then they get elected to Congress, where they spend like drunken sailors in ways that benefit their corporate sponsors.

But Ryan, he says, is a true believer who really would shrink government and drown it in the bathtub. And the debate we need to have with the American people is, Is this really want you want? Do you really want to live with the result, if this were actually done? Have it out, once and for all. People, do you really want to break up the Medicare and Social Security programs, take food out of the mouths of poor babies, let our infrastructure rot and forest fires rage and meat go uninspected so that billionaires can get a bigger tax cut? Is that really want you want? Because, whether you realize it or not, that’s what you keep voting for. And then you wonder why government is so bleeped up.

So, I don’t think we should merely dismiss Ryan’s plan as crazy. We need to clearly explain why it is crazy.

The Choice

Ralph Nader must be slowing down. He hasn’t yet issued an open letter declaring there’s not a dime’s worth of difference between the two tickets. Give him another 72 hours.

Of course, there really is a huge difference between the two tickets. Let’s hope voters notice before November.

Jonathan Chait writes that Paul Ryan’s placement on the ticket signals that “movement conservatism” now is in complete control of the Republican Party. It feels as if they’ve been in control for the past 30 years. However,

What makes Ryan so extraordinary is that he is not just a handsome slickster skilled at conveying sincerity with a winsome heartland affect. Pols like that come along every year. He is also (as Rich Yeselson put it) the chief party theoretician. Far more than even Ronald Reagan, he is deeply grounded is the ideological precepts of the conservative movement — a longtime Ayn Rand devotee who imbibed deeply from the lunatic supply-side tracts of Jude Wanniski and George Gilder. He has not merely formed an alliance with the movement, he is a product of it.

In this sense, Ryan’s nomination represents an important historical marker and the completion of a 50-year struggle. Starting in the early sixties, conservative activists set out to seize control of the Republican Party. At the time the party was firmly in the hands of Establishmentarians who had made their peace with the New Deal, but the activists regarded the entire development of the modern regulatory and welfare states as a horrific assault on freedom bound to lead to imminent societal collapse. In fits and starts, the conservatives slowly advanced – nominating Goldwater, retreating under Nixon, nominating Reagan, retreating as Reagan sought to govern, and on and on through Gingrich, Bush, and his successors.

Over time the movement and the party have grown synonymous, and Ryan’s nominations represents a moment when the conservative movement ceased to control the politicians from behind the scenes and openly assumed the mantle of power.

Romney, meanwhile, is still pretending to be his own man and says he will not run on Mr. Ryan’s infamous budget, but will produce his own budget. Don’t hold your breath waiting for details until you enjoy passing out. It’s plain that, if elected, Mittens will be hostage to the Ryan Republicans. And we’ll all be screwed.

No Guts, No Glory: More Commentary on the Ryan Pick

Statement from the Obama campaign:

“In naming Congressman Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney has chosen a leader of the House Republicans who shares his commitment to the flawed theory that new budget-busting tax cuts for the wealthy, while placing greater burdens on the middle class and seniors, will somehow deliver a stronger economy. The architect of the radical Republican House budget, Ryan, like Romney, proposed an additional $250,000 tax cut for millionaires, and deep cuts in education from Head Start to college aid. His plan also would end Medicare as we know it by turning it into a voucher system, shifting thousands of dollars in health care costs to seniors. As a member of Congress, Ryan rubber-stamped the reckless Bush economic policies that exploded our deficit and crashed our economy. Now the Romney-Ryan ticket would take us back by repeating the same, catastrophic mistakes.”

My thoughts: I don’t think Paul Ryan is the new Sarah Palin. He’s not going to self-destruct the way Palin did. However, I think the Obama campaign is smart enough and aggressive enough to take the fight to the RR campaign, and keep them on defense. And recently Dem leadership has gotten much, much better at message discipline.

Ryan’s presence on the ticket helps the Obama campaign focus on what a Romney administration might actually do, which ought to scare the stuffing out of most Americans. So far, Romney’s arguments for himself are all warm and fuzzy and soft-focused promises about how he’s going to make it all better, with the unspoken subtext that we’re supposed to just trust him on how he’s going to do that, because he’s not going to tell us. He’s not going to be able to get away with that any more, with Mr. Cat Food standing next to him on the podium.

I doubt very much that Ryan was Mittens’s original choice, even though he and Ryan appear to think very much alike. But the GOP establishment appears to have put him on notice that it would be Ryan or else. They probably want to run Ryan for president in 2016, and which they could reverse the ticket now.

Steve Kornacki:

The most important thing to know about Mitt Romney’s running-mate choice is this: It’s not the move he would have made if the campaign was going the way he hoped it would.

Until now, the Romney strategy has been relentlessly single-minded. He’s had no interest in articulating or embracing specific policy proposals and has generally shied away from saying or doing anything that anyone might find at all unsettling. More than any other candidate in recent history, he’s strained to be generic, someone positioned to serve as a protest vehicle for swing voters who are inclined to vote President Obama out….

…But the generic strategy isn’t working for Romney, or at least it doesn’t seem to be. The Ryan pick represents a new approach: Make the campaign about a Big Idea – in this case, the radical reimagining of tax policy and spending priorities that Ryan has proposed in the name of deficit reduction. Whether Romney now runs specifically on Ryan’s budget blueprint or some revised version of it doesn’t really matter. For the rest of the campaign, he and his running-mate will be answering for the social safety net cuts, Medicare voucher-ization and steep tax cuts for the wealthy that Ryan has called for.

Steve Benen:

In any presidential election in which there’s an incumbent, there’s a larger fight about whether the race is a “referendum” or a “choice.” In 2012, Mitt Romney obviously wanted it to be a referendum — if you’re not satisfied with the status quo, replace President Obama with a generic Republican. The tack helps explain why the GOP candidate has been so vague on so many issues.

As of this morning, Romney’s strategy has been thrown out the window. Paul Ryan wrote a right-wing budget plan, which redistributes wealth from the bottom up, and which guarantees voters will be presented with a very clear choice in the fall, not a referendum.

Indeed, it’s not unreasonable to think the entire election dynamic will be turned on its ear — voters will be asked to vote, not on Obama, but on the far-right Romney-Ryan vision.

On the other hand, I’m hearing that Ryan really is a good campaigner and quick on his feet in a debate, so the Obama campaign is going to have to stay smart to make this work for them. And much of the news media will be working very hard to portray Ryan as “serious” and “bold.” But I’m feeling pretty good about November right now.

Faux Nooz Says It’s Ryan (Update: It’s Ryan)

Mittens is scheduled to announce his running mate this morning, while touring the battleship Wisconsin, in Virginia. Stephen Hayes and Bill Kristol gleefully are predicting the pick will be Paul Ryan. Yes, Hayes and Kristol are nearly always wrong, but if Mittens doesn’t choose Ryan, the GOP establishment will likely feel bitch slapped and will whine about it all through the convention.

Now Faux Nooz has confirmed that it’s Ryan. Faux is about as reliable as Kim Kardashian’s wedding vows, but again, they’re speaking for the GOP establishment, and if Mittens disappoints, Mittens will feel their wrath.

In short, the establishment is demanding that Romney choose Ryan, and I doubt Romney has the cojones to say no.

The more interesting question is, why does the GOP establishment have a death wish?

Update — now the Washington Post says it’s Ryan.

Update — now the New York Times says it’s Ryan.

They are high-fivin’ in the White House right now.

Update — Ezra Klein has several thoughts on what the choice means. Significantly —

  • “This is an admission of fear from the Romney campaign.”
  • “Ryan upends Romney’s whole strategy.”

How does Ryan upend Romney’s strategy? The Romney plan had been to make the campaign a referendum on Obama’s handling of the economy, while Mittens himself remained vague about what he would do to make things better. With Ryan as the choice, the campaign is going to focus on specific policy proposals, which is what the Obama campaign wants.

Mittens also has wanted to run on his record as a private businessman and frequently reminds people that President Obama “never spent a day in the private sector.” But Paul Ryan “never spent a day in the private sector” either.

Update — Mistermix writes,

I woke up this morning to the reek of piss-pants desperation emanating from my Twitter in the form of Mitt Romney’s VP Pick, Paul Davis Ryan (and yes, it is happening, because those morons can’t keep a secret). Man, this tells us a lot about just how worried, weak, meandering, insular and politically inept the Romney campaign is.

Update: Charles Pierce

Leave it to Willard Romney, international man of principle, to get himself bullied into being bold and independent.

Hey, Mitt — Politics Ain’t Beanbag

Mittens thinks his business record as well as his taxes should be off limits in the campaign.

Mitt Romney, battered by Democratic attacks over his Bain Capital record and taxes, is calling on President Obama to agree to a truce over his business career.

“Our campaign would be — helped immensely if we had an agreement between both campaigns that we were only going to talk about issues and that attacks based upon — business or family or taxes or things of that nature,” Romney said, according to excerpts of an upcoming interview with NBC’s Chuck Todd released Friday.

Romney said he would prefer the campaigns “only talk about issues,” and claimed that “our ads haven’t gone after the president personally. … We haven’t dredged up the old stuff that people talked about last time around. We haven’t gone after the personal things.”

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul offered up a broader take on whether Romney was really suggesting that his career at Bain Capital — the crux of his argument that he is better equipped to handle the economy — should be considered off-limits.

First, since Mittens has been running on his business career, it’s not off limits. And if he’s not going to release his taxes, he needs to man up and take his lumps for it, and stop whining.

Second, Mitt’s anti-Obama ads are among the most dishonest campaign ads ever produced. For example,

Mitt’s anti-Obama welfare reform ad is a lie.

Mitt claimed the Obama campaign was trying to take voting rights away from servicemen and women — a lie.

The “you didn’t build that” ad — a deceitful fabrication.

I could go on. Basically, under Mitt’s Rules, he gets to lie with impunity, but the Obama campaign is not allowed to tell the truth about Mitt. I guess he thinks that’s the only way he can win.