cozysweater wrote:
I thought Ryan was a bit of a darling right now. His plan(s) might be kind of crazy but at least he has some, and probably will be a lot more energizing than the milquetoast candidate Romney seems to be.
Honestly, I don't know what Romney is thinking. This is going to cost him dearly in the state of Florida, where Medicare and Medicaid are pretty much sacred cows. This may energize the right-wing base, but it's doing just as much for the Democrats, who are practically salivating over the opportunity to paint Romney/Ryan as the "haves and have-mores" ticket.
I take it Romney saw Ryan's youth, charisma, and the nearly universal support of the Ryan budget plan among the right fringe as assets to his campaign. That may be, but I don't see how that sort of ticket is going to play favorably to women, minorities, students, independents, or moderates, all of whom may now potentially be scared off by the hyper-conservative rhetoric. It's like the Republicans completely forgot how disastrous Sarah Palin was for the party four years ago. Charisma and ideology aren't enough to attract a majority of the electorate. Perhaps that's why the Republican-held states are fighting dirty with these absurd voter ID laws-- they know they can't win in a fair fight this year.
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I won't be voting for them, but suddenly Romney looks like more of a threat. Plus they're both pretty, young-ish white guys versus Joe "foot-in-mouth disease" Biden and the black guy who couldn't fix the economy in under 4 years.
First of all, to call Mitt Romney young-ish is a bit of a stretch. Romney is 65 years old. To put that in perspective, Biden is only 4 years older than him. And before you levy that "foot-in-mouth" accusation at Biden, I would remind you about Mr. "I like being able to fire people" Romney.
If we're arguing about the economy, I think it's fair to characterize Obama as having made mistakes. That, however, is a far cry from the sort of institutionalized cronyism and tax loopholes for the top %1 which would most assuredly occur under a Romney administration. Think things are bad now? They can be
much worse, very easily.
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