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Multiple offender

Romney is fortunate we allow broader latitude to candidates than presidents

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Romney wrote a New York Times op-ed opposing Obama’s plan to save the Detroit auto industry; today he boasts that the White House followed his lead. He authored a 2009 USA Today column backing a health insurance mandate like the one he pushed through in Massachusetts — his only undeniable success as governor. Now he calls “Obamacare” an offense to freedom.

Actually, the scary thing is that millions of low-information voters don’t know these things; millions more can rationalize damn near anything during an election campaign. So when Romney falsely claims that Obama has no jobs plan, they’re the suckers he’s angling for.

But what if he actually won the election? Would Romney, as president, continue his habit of shameless prevarication? The candidate’s recent foray into what my friend Bob Somerby at the Daily Howler calls “the cult of the offhand comment” makes me suspect that he would.

Touting his record of creating 4.3 million jobs, what President Obama clearly meant to say during his famous blunder was that state and local governments are hurting worse than businesses. Hence, “the private sector’s doing fine.”

Talk about stepping on your own message! The White House backpedaled almost immediately. There are ways Obama could have defended his remark: the stock market’s almost doubled since 2009; corporate profits are at an all time-high; limousine and yacht sales are strong. But the president had clearly bungled his lines.

Romney pounced, deriding Obama as out of touch. Fair enough. Nobody really believes Obama thinks the economy’s booming; but, hey, it’s politics.

Then he took it a big step further.

“He wants another stimulus; he wants to hire more government workers. He says we need more firemen, more policemen, more teachers,” Romney said. “Did he not get the message of Wisconsin?  The American people did. It’s time for us to cut back on government and help the American people.”

So the message is fewer teachers, cops and firefighters? It’s hard to put any other construction on Romney’s words. The Obama campaign quickly produced a video starring Mitt himself.

The ad argued: “While President Obama has a plan to create 1 million jobs, Mitt Romney is proposing cutbacks of jobs for police officers, firefighters, and teachers — the same plan he enforced in Massachusetts.”

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