Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed News
Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live

Top House Republican Rips Obama On Libya, Demands Answers

$
0
0

“Americans remain concerned and frustrated about how your Administration has handled the response to the attack,” the House speaker writes in a letter.

Image by Yuri Gripas / Reuters

WASHINGTON, D.C. — House Speaker John Boehner Thursday slammed President Obama's handling of the Sept. 11 attack in Libya, demanding a raft of new information from the information, including why requests for additional security were denied by the State Department.

"The national debate since the tragedy ... demonstrates many Americans remain concerned and frustrated about how your Administration has handled the response to the attack," Boehner wrote in a letter to Obama released by his office Thursday afternoon.

Boehner added, "The new information in the public domain is also deeply troubling to many House Members who attended an interagency briefing in September, as there are perceived inconsistencies between what they learned during the briefing and the now widely available documentation regarding what was known at the time of the attack."

In the letter, Boehner poses questions regarding the administration's understanding of the security situation in Benghazi, Libya, prior to the attack, as well as information it received about the reason for the attack immediately after.

Boehner also expresses concern about security at the consulate after the attack. CNN found Ambassador Chris Stevens' diary at the site, prompting a rebuke from the State Department.

"Many Americans are frustrated and alarmed to read news that agencies appear to have better access to the site of the attack and to individuals of interest than the Administration," Boehner wrote.

Republicans have widely criticized the administration for its failure to prevent the attack in Benghazi and its actions since, and have attempted to place the preponderance of blame on Obama. Both Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have publicly accepted responsibility for the attacks.

See the full text of the letter from Boehner, below:

Image by


The Secret Economy Of Pollsters

$
0
0

With less two weeks left until the election, pollsters are churning out 20 state and national polls a day — all for attention. “Politics is not a major source of income, but it is a major source of branding,” says Zogby.

Scott Rasmussen, of Rasmussen Reports, says he promotes his polls across five different platforms every week.

Via: foxnewsinsider.com

The steady stream of polls from private firms, media organizations, and universities has become a central, and at times controversial, thread of the presidential campaign.

And voters might be excused for their suspicion on a single point: What’s in it for the pollsters?

Organizations are spending between a few thousand dollars (for automated calls) and tens of thousands (for live callers) fielding state and national polls — now dropping at a rate of 20 polls per day.

They’re doing it, one way or another, for the attention, pollsters say: It’s marketing for private pollsters and universities, and it’s reportable news for media companies. But the flooded polling market does provide one potentially problematic incentive — pollsters are eager to make their surveys interesting.

“They are a marketing engine. Public Policy Polling has created a brand for themselves by releasing their numbers publicly,” said Mark Blumenthal, Senior Polling Editor at The Huffington Post and the first professional pollster to get into the blogging business under the name “Mystery Pollster.”

Blumenthal described PPP, a Democratic firm, and Rasmussen Reports both as “small fledgling PR companies giving robo calls away into the public domain in order to promote themselves.” PPP’s director, Tom Jensen, said it spends about $3,500 on each automated national poll, on top of a monthly phone bill as high as $30,000.

The Raleigh-based PPP uses exclusively automated telephone surveys to track opinion polling. The firm’s weekly tracking poll is sponsored by the giant national labor union SEIU, and distributed by the liberal blog DailyKos.

But PPP doesn’t make its money from sponsorships — their profit comes instead from the private polling, solicited by clients, that never goes public. “That’s where we make all of our money,” Jensen explained.

John Zogby, whose polls are viewed with some suspicion by many in the press, said his approach is similar.

“Politics is not a major source of income, but it is a major source of branding,” he said, adding that ninety percent of his firm’s revenue is from corporate clients and international governments.

Rasmussen Reports, by contrast, operates more like a news organization. Founder Scott Rasmussen described to BuzzFeed as “a media company that makes its money by selling advertising and subscriptions.”

Rasmussen also listed the abounding ways in which his site is able to generate traffic, and ad dollars: a daily email newsletter, a nationally syndicated radio news service, an online video service, a weekly newspaper column, and a nationally syndicated TV show, “What America Thinks.”

Because of his cross-platform approach to mass-marketing, Rasmussen has become a one-man brand, appealing particularly to conservative circles, and offering his surveys as a balance to the polling conservatives believe is biased, or skewed.

Another breed of pollsters — schools like Marist and Quinnipiac who conduct well-regarded political surveys — benefit from the low cost of student callers, and from the prestige it brings to the school name.

“[Quinnipiac] credits the poll as being one of the great draws for perspective students,” said Blumenthal. “They might not learn about Quinnipiac from the football team, say, but because they’ve heard of the poll.”

Most of the live polls — considered the most reliable by some analysts — are sponsored by media companies. And the big names of political polling — the television networks among them — maintain the cost is well worth the product. Tweeting about NBC News’s national poll Monday night, Chuck Todd said, “so you know, a national poll, properly done w/live callers costs anywhere from 40-60K per survey.” In a second tweet, he added, “we do it 10-12 times a year...worth it.”

The networks get their own kind of marketing from polls — call it prestige. Despite the high costs of live calling, the networks will hang on to their commitment to polling as an investment in news-gathering and status.

CNN, for example, often refers to its polls as “scientific,” suggesting their internals are as accurate and detailed as their reporting. When CNN partners on its widely cited polls with ORC International — a global market research firm — the cable network foots the cost of the entire poll, according to a network spokesperson. “As far as the business model,” the spokesperson said, “the polling results are made available to more than a dozen of CNN’s television networks and its digital platforms.”

But with little profit payoff for big networks, “there is a big move in the direction of robo surveys,” said Blumenthal, adding that all but one of the networks has gotten rid of its in-house calling facility. CBS News, says Blumenthal, still has a small phone bank in its building.

As the industry continues to shift toward fast and cheap robo calls in exchange for marketing, the categories — media, private business — may also be blurring.

“Some media companies hire reporters and assign them to cover stories. Instead of reporters, we cover the news with polls,” said Rasmussen. “We recognize that nobody we really cares about the polls, they care about the topics we poll about.”

Republican Launches Corn Dog Attack On Democratic Opponent In South Dakota

$
0
0

Rep. Kristi Noem also hits Matt Varilek for backing cap-and-trade legislation. “2006: Matt Varilek hosts a raucous National Corndog Day party in his swanky D.C. neighborhood, serving more than 1,000 corn dogs, 1,200 beers and a 150-pound ice luge for consuming shots of Jägermeister.”

Source: youtube.com

Romney's Closing Argument

$
0
0

At speech today in Ames, Iowa, Romney will make the case for “Big Change,” because “We cannot afford four more years like the last four years.”

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, John Rich (2nd L), Big Kenny (L) and Meatloaf (R) as they sing "God Bless America" at a campaign rally in Defiance, Ohio October 25, 2012.

Image by Brian Snyder / Reuters

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney is focusing in on his final, broad message to the electorate, and will be making his closing argument to the American people this afternoon in Ames, Iowa.

The simple message: America "cannot afford four more years like the last four years."

After test-driving many of the themes over the past week, Romney has decided to peddle "real change" and "big change" to the country — both an attack on President Barack Obama's failures and his overreaches.

Romney will argue that while Obama focuses on Sesame Street and "Romnesia," only he and Paul Ryan understand the depth of the nation's problems.

An aide said the message is "designed to appeal to swing voters on the issues that matter to them — jobs and the economy, but also to all Americans however they are struggling in the Obama economy."

Read the excerpts from the remarks:

This is an election of consequence. Our campaign is about big things, because we happen to believe that America faces big challenges. We recognize this is a year with a big choice, and the American people want to see big changes. And together we can bring real change to this country.

Four years ago, candidate Obama spoke to the scale of the times. Today, he shrinks from it, trying instead to distract our attention from the biggest issues to the smallest--from characters on Sesame Street and silly word games to misdirected personal attacks he knows are false.

But this election matters more than that. It matters to your family.

It matters to the senior who needs to get an appointment with a medical specialist but is told by one receptionist afteranother that the doctor isn't taking any new Medicare patients, because Medicare has been slashed to pay for Obamacare.

It matters to the man from Waukesha, Wisconsin I spoke with several days ago, in what were supposed to be his best work years. He said that he used to have a job at $25 an hour with benefits and now has one at $8 an hour, without benefits.

It matters to the college student, graduating this spring, with 10 to 20 thousand dollars in student debt, who now learnsthat she also will be paying for 50 thousand dollars in government debt, a burden that will put the American Dream beyond her reach.

It matters for the child in a failing school, unable to go to the school of his parent's choosing, because the teacher's union that funds the President's campaign opposes school choice.

The President's campaign has a slogan: it is "forward." But to the 23 million Americans struggling to find a good job, these last four years feel a lot more like "backward." We cannot afford four more years like the last four years.

We have had four presidential and vice-presidential debates. And there is nothing in what the President proposed or defended that has any prospect of meeting the challenges of the times. Raising taxes will not grow jobs or ignite the economy--in fact, his tax plan has been calculated to destroy 700,000 jobs. A new stimulus, three years after the recession officially ended, may spare government, but it will not stimulate the private sector any better than did the stimulus of four years ago. And cutting one trillion dollars from the military will kill jobs and devastate our national defense.

This is not the time to double down on the trickle-down government policies that have failed us; it is time for new, bold changes that measure up to the moment, that can bring America's families the certainty that the future will be better than the past.

If Paul Ryan and I are elected as your president and vice president, we will endeavor with all our hearts and energy to restore America. Instead of more spending, more borrowing from China and higher taxes from Washington, we’ll renew our faith in the power of free people pursuing their dreams. We’ll start with our plan for a stronger middle class…

Paul and I won’t stop there. When we take office, we will take responsibility to solve the big problems that everyoneagrees can’t wait any longer.

We will save and secure Medicare and Social Security, both for current and near retirees, and for the generation to come. We will restore the $716 billion President Obama has taken from Medicare to pay for his vaunted Obamacare.

We will reform healthcare to tame the growth in its cost, to provide for those with pre-existing conditions, and to assure that every American has access to healthcare. We will replace government choice with consumer choice, bringing the dynamics of the marketplace to a sector of our lives that has long been dominated by government.

I know something about leading because I’ve led before. In business, at the Olympics, and in Massachusetts, I’ve brought people together to achieve real change.

I was elected as a Republican governor in a state with a legislature that was 85% Democrat. We were looking at a multi-billion dollar budget gap. But instead of fighting with one another, we came together to solve our problems. We actually cut spending--reduced it. We lowered taxes 19 times. We defended school choice. And we worked to make our state business friendly.

Our state moved up 20 places in job growth. Our schools were ranked number one in the nation. And we turned a $3billion budget deficit into a $2 billion rainy day fund.

I know it because I have seen it: Good Democrats can come together with good Republicans to solve big problems. What we need is leadership.



We face big challenges. But we also have big opportunities … If we seize the moment and rise to the occasion, the century ahead will be an American Century.



What this requires is change, change from the course of the last four years. It requires that we put aside the small and the petty, and demand the scale of change we deserve: we need real change, big change.

Our campaign is about that kind of change--confronting the problems that politicians have avoided for over a decade, revitalizing our competitive economy, modernizing our education, restoring our founding principles.

This is the kind of change that promises a better future, one shaped by men and women pursuing their dreams in their own unique ways.

This election is a choice between the status quo--going forward with the same policies of the last four years--or instead, choosing real change, change that offers promise, promise that the future will be better than the past.

Google: More Search For Obama Than Romney

$
0
0

Romney sees faster growth on YouTube after debates

Lena Dunham Obama Ad Echoes Vladimir Putin's Creepiest Campaign Video

Mindy Meyer Throws Major Fit Over Debate

$
0
0

The glitziest state senate candidate tries to bar The Jewish Channel from covering her fundraiser after she didn't attend their debate.

Mindy Meyer, the 22-year-old "Diva of the District" running for State Senate in Brooklyn, refused to attend a debate hosted by The Jewish Channel and tried to prevent the Jewish Channel from covering her fundraiser

According to The Jewish Channel, Meyer's campaign spent weeks in negotiations trying to move the date of the debate, which was originally set for October 12. Finally they cancelled, blaming her school schedule.

The channel told the Meyer campaign they would be holding the debate anyway, with incumbent Kevin Parker, and her rep replied that they would not be allowed into a fundraising event: "The Jewish Channel is not invited to cover the Mindy Meyer event. We don't appreciate being blackmailed into a debate. We will not generate a press badge for your channel."

Watch the Meyer-less debate below:

Corrected to reflect that Meyer's campaign blocked The Jewish Channel from the fundraiser, not the debate itself.


View Entire List ›

Biden Says Hell, Crosses Himself At McGovern Memorial


Key Obama Ally To Make Senate Fundraising Trip To Indiana

$
0
0

Sen. Dick Durbin to stump for Democrat Joe Donnelly, hoping to take advantage of Republican Richard Mourdock's controversial rape comments.

Image by Win McNamee / Getty Images

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin is making a last minute fundraising push for Indiana Senate candidate Joe Donnelly in an effort to put the one tim-long shot Democrat over the hump in his campaign against Republican Richard Mourdock.

Durbin, the number two Democrat in the Senate and one of President Obama’s closest allies in Washington, will headline a fundraiser Monday afternoon in Indianapolis for Donnelly, according to a Democratic aide.

His trip with less than 10 days before election day is a clear signal that party leaders believe they have a prime opportunity to pick up what had once been seen as a likely Republican seat. Mourdock — a Tea Party conservative who beat moderate Republican Senator Richard Lugar in the primary — committed a major unforced error during a debate Tuesday when he said he opposes abortion rights for rape victims because God “intended” in some sense for them to bear a child.

Since then, Democrats have pounced: the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has put new resources into the race and even the Obama campaign has latched onto the comments to hit Mitt Romney.

Durbin had initially been scheduled to stop in Indianapolis following the vice presidential debate earlier this month in Kentucky. But a campaign stop by former President Bill Clinton ended that plan.

But with Mourdock's controversial statements on rape and abortion now threatening to derail his campaign, Durbin believes there’s “extra urgency” to help Donnelly in the waning days of the election, the aide said.

Durbin is “making a last fundraising push for Donnelly now that Mourdock's on the ropes, no doubt,” the aide explained, noting that the veteran Senate Democrat will likely use his trip to also hammer Mourdock for his comments in the local media.

The State Of The Money Race In 7 Charts

Ne-Yo And Friends Try To Save Obama With New "Forward" Song

$
0
0

Herbie Hancock, Johnny Rzeznik, Delta Rae, and Natasha Bedingfield provide an assist. Will.i.am they are not.

Source: youtube.com

From the press release:

FORWARD, a new song performed by Grammy Award winning R&B singer-songwriter NE YO, THE GOO GOO DOLLS’ JOHNNY RZEZNIK, music legend HERBIE HANCOCK, DELTA RAE and NATASHA BEDINGFIELD was released today as a grassroots effort to motivate and inspire nationwide voter participation in the upcoming 2012 Presidential election.

The song was written and created by hit songwriters Gregg Alexander and Danielle Brisebois of the The New Radicals, and Fred Goldring, who was behind the 2008 multiple award-winning grassroots music video YES WE CAN with will.i.am. Grammy Award winning producer John Shanks produced the record, and the powerful music video for the song was produced and directed by Graham Henman and his team at Hello and Company.

NBA Commissioner Says Obama's "Not As Good As He Thinks He Is At Basketball"

Westboro Baptist Church Thought They Were Picketing Walter Mondale's Funeral, Not George McGovern's

$
0
0

Mondale is alive, and was in attendance.

Westboro Baptist Church, the extremist group from Topeka, Kansas largely made up of members of Fred Phelps' family, planned to picket the late Sen. George McGovern's funeral today in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Except they thought at first that it was the funeral of Walter Mondale, who is alive.

The group has since changed the wording on their website to reflect that it was McGovern's funeral they were protesting. According to a source on the scene, the group showed up and protested in front of the local Argus Leader newsroom, with the correct signs.

Mondale himself was in attendance at the funeral.

Romney Campaign Exaggerates Size Of Nevada Event With Altered Image

Obama Tumblr Posts Picture Of Romney Wearing A Dunce Cap


Club For Growth Ups Ad Buy In Indiana By "Substantial Amount"

$
0
0

Conservatives hope to shift narrative in wake of Mourdock's rape statement.

Image by Michael Conroy / AP

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The conservative Club for Growth is throwing more of its weight behind embattled Indiana Senate candidate Richard Mourdock, hoping to counter a flood of money and support for his Democratic opponent.

During a debate Tuesday evening, Mourdock said pregnancy from rape is "something God intended." The remark has since garnered national attention, providing Democrats with a ripe opportunity to pull ahead in what has been a hotly contested tossup race. Majority Whip Dick Durbin will headline a fundraiser Monday to support Democatic Rep. Joe Donnelly, Mourdock's opponent.

But even as some Republicans have criticized Mourdock, the party is continuing to back him in principle and financially. In the final 11 days before Election Day, the Club for Growth, for its part, will commit more money to airing a 30-second television ad that says Mourdock "opposes job-killing tax hikes, regulations, and debts."

The Club for Growth would not say by exactly how much it is increasing its spending in Indiana; a spokesman, Barney Keller, called it "substantial." With its latest ad buy, the group's total spending in the race exceeds $3.5 million.

Last week, the outside group committed an additional $600,000 to the tight Senate race between Mourdock and Donnelly.

Prior to the Senate debate, the race was considered a tossup, but Mourdock held a slight lead many polls—but his standing in the race has since slipped. On Friday, a poll published by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee showed Mourdock trailing Donnelly by 7 points, 47 percent to 40 percent; meanwhile, an internal poll released by Mourdock's campaign showed the race tied at 44 percent.

Although some Republicans, such as Sen. John McCain, have distanced themselves from Mourdock in light of his remark, others, such as Sen. John Cornyn, the head of the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, have maintained their support.

Obama Administration Sets Up Supreme Court Challenge To Laws Targeting Gay People

$
0
0

The Supreme Court is expected to decide in the coming year whether the Defense of Marriage Act is constitutional. A recent court decision backed the Justice Department's view.

Image by John Gara/Buzzfeed

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Obama administration Friday asked the Supreme Court to hear a challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act that squarely raises the question whether courts should use similar skepticism in reviewing laws targeting gay and lesbian people for discrimination as they do when considering laws based on race, religion or sex.

The Department of Justice told the Supreme Court in a filing on Friday that it should use Edith Windsor's DOMA challenge to decide whether the federal definition of marriage being limited only to opposite-sex couples is constitutional — following a favorable ruling in the case at the appeals court hearing the case this past week.

The move represents a change for DOJ, which previously had asked the Supreme Court to use one of the other several cases presented to it as the case the court would use to resolve the constitutional question. The court is expected to take up the question of which case to hear sometime after the election, potentially at the justices' conference on Nov. 20.

The legal reasoning behind the Second Circuit Court of Appeals' decision in the Windsor's case likely led to the change of view. The court ruled that laws like DOMA, which classify people based on their sexual orientation, should be subject to additional scrutiny as part of when courts examine whether laws violate equal protection standards — similar to the way courts view laws that classify based on race, religion or sex.

The Second Circuit was the first federal court of appeals in the country to apply intermediate scrutiny to DOMA, a decision that echoes DOJ's argument to the courts over the past year and a half. Race and religion classifications receive strict scrutiny, but the court found the lower, intermediate, scrutiny to be appropriate in Windsor's case. Accordingly, DOJ is now backing that case as the one the court should use to resolve DOMA's constitutionality.

The House Republican leadership, on the other hand, has asked the Supreme Court to consider a First Circuit Court of Appeals ruling — which did not use intermediate (or strict) scrutiny to reach its decision. In a combined set of cases, Massachusetts v. United States and Gill v. Office of Personnel Management, the court there decided — based on a form of the lowest level of scrutiny, rational basis — that the discrimination faced by gay people and the fact that DOMA represented an exception to the historic federal deference to state marriage laws aided in a decision that the law was unconstitutional regardless of the level of scrutiny applied.

Notably, the Supreme Court has twice declined to apply heightened scrutiny to laws classifying people based on sexual orientation, in a 1996 case striking down a Colorado constitutional amendment barring gay protections in the state and in a 2003 case striking down a Texas sodomy law.

In a supplemental filing today, Solicitor General Donald Verrilli wrote:

[T]his case now provides the most appropriate vehicle for this Court’s resolution of the constitutionality of Section 3 of DOMA. In particular, the court of appeals in Massachusetts was constrained by binding circuit precedent as to the applicable level of scrutiny, whereas the court of appeals here was not so constrained, and its analysis may be beneficial to this Court’s consideration of that issue.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which is representing Windsor along with lawyers from the law firm of Paul Weiss, asked the Supreme Court to take Windsor's case even before the Second Circuit had ruled in the appeal of her challenge.

DOJ Filing in Windsor Case

Harry Reid Taken To Las Vegas Area Hospital

$
0
0

The Senate Majority Leader's hospitalization follows multi-car crash in Las Vegas.

Image by Julie Jacobson / AP

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid Friday was taken to a Las Vegas area hospital following a multi-car crash, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal.

According to his office, Reid suffered minor injuries but was taken to the hospital by his security detail as a precaution.

"Senator Reid was taken to University Medical Center Hospital by his security detail as a precaution, and walked in on his own. Senator Reid was wearing his seatbelt at the time of the accident. He experienced rib and hip contusions and has been cleared for release by the doctors," the statement said.

Reid's office also noted that his wife was not in the car, but that "some of Senator Reid's detail and a staffer had minor injuries in the accident and were evaluated."

The crash involved six cars, including four that were in Reid’s caravan, according to news reports.

Reid, 73, had delivered a speech earlier in the day dedicating the new National Atomic Testing Museum.

Mitt Romney Finally Has The Campaign He Wanted

$
0
0

In the arc of the race, Romney is back to where he started. Win or lose, he's talking about the economy.

Image by Brian Snyder / Reuters

AMES, Iowa — It was mid-afternoon by the time Mitt Romney stepped up to an outdoor podium here Friday, but the temperature still hovered stubbornly below 40 degrees, keeping the crowd to a modest size. The lofty soundtrack that accompanied his arrival felt a bit over-the-top for the smallness of the setting.

But Romney, in a white shirt, dark tie, and sporty black windbreaker, was all smiles.

After a blistering primary campaign, a summer of distractions, and an early autumn of flailing, the Republican nominee has finally gotten the chance to run the race he always wanted to run. Now, speaking to the audience of a couple thousand bundled-up voters — with the finish line in sight — he appeared to be relishing it.

"This is an election of consequence," he declared. "Our campaign is about big things, because we happen to believe that America faces big challenges. We recognize this is a year with a big choice, and the American people want to see big changes. And together we can bring real change to this country."

His campaign hasn't always been quite so "big."

Romney spent much of the Republican primary carpet-bombing one state after another with attack ads — a scorched-earth strategy that, aides later admitted, made it hard for him to promote a positive campaign theme.

When he finally did emerge as the nominee, he quickly went to work filling his campaign coffers and rebuilding bridges to the Republican base. That meant a summer of stump speeches studded with intense character attacks on President Obama, and a constantly changing message that seemed at times to be chasing tweets and other shiny objects, rather than driving grand ideas.

But with 11 days left in the election, Romney's speech here marked a return to the elevated message that got him into the race.

For all his campaign's bravado, Romney's aides privately concede that the election is quite close, with one admitting, "It's a coin toss at this point." (That's a point the Obama campaign will still feverishly challenge.) And rather than spend the final days of the campaign engaging in the sort of hand-to-hand combat that delights conservative talk radio — on Benghazi, for instance, or abortion — Romney's Boston-based campaign is returning to basics for their closing argument.

View Video ›

In his speech Friday, Romney presented himself again as a hyper-competent turnaround artist; a wingtip-wearing management consultant with a dash of gravitas.

"Our campaign is about that kind of change," Romney said. "Confronting the problems that politicians have avoided for over a decade, revitalizing our competitive economy, modernizing our education, restoring our founding principles."

Rather than run away from his moderate Massachusetts gubernatorial record, Romney pointed to it as an example of how he would navigate the shoals of Washington bureaucracy to achieve "real change."

"We will meet with Democrat and Republican leadership regularly, we will look for common ground and shared principles, and we will put the interests of the American people above the interests of the politicians," he said. "I know something about leading because I’ve led before. In business, at the Olympics, and in Massachusetts, I’ve brought people together to achieve real change."

If the familiar rhetoric in his Ames speech fell somewhat short of the "major address" the press billed it to be, it wasn't just because much of it was lifted from a stump speech he's been delivering across Ohio in recent days.

Indeed, the remarks offered a distillation of the major themes he ran on when he launched his campaign last year at a farm in Manchester, speaking under a banner that read, "Believe in America." Eighteen months later, he returned to that idea as he argued that his opponent had failed.

"President Obama frequently reminds us that he inherited a troubled economy. But a troubled economy is not all that President Obama inherited," Romney intoned. "He inherited the greatest nation in the history of the earth. He inherited the most productive and innovative nation in history. He inherited the largest economy in the world. And he inherited a people who have always risen to the occasion, regardless of the challenges they faced, so long as we have been led by men and women who have brought us together, called on our patriotism, and guided the nation with vision and conviction."

Senior adviser Eric Fehrnstrom framed the speech as "seizing" the message of change, and branding Obama as the tired status quo.

"There is a fundamental question facing the American electorate. Do they want change, or do they want another four years like the last four years? That's what the speech is about," he said.

It was a canned quote that Fehnrstrom had repeated to reporters dozens of times before. But for the first time in a long time, Romney's campaign actually seems to believe it.


View Entire List ›

Obama "Expects" DOMA Will Be Found Unconstitutional

$
0
0

In an MTV interview, Obama says that “to legislate federally” on same-sex couples' marriage rights is “probably the wrong way to go,” adding, “The courts are going to be examining these issues.” The remarks are his most extensive on the topic since May.

View Video ›

Image by

Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images