Out soon: The Parties Versus the People: How to Turn Republicans and Democrats into Americans by former Rep. Mickey Edwards.
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Romney Admitted in 2002 He Never Cut Ties to Bain
Politicker: “Back in 2002 when he was running for Governor of Massachusetts, Mitt Romney and his aides had no problem admitting he retained his position as CEO of Bain Capital after 1999. Press articles from the time describe how Mr. Romney was on a ‘leave of absence’ after 1999 and had not fully cut ties with the private equity firm.”
Dave Weigel quotes a Boston Herald article when Romney left the firm in February 1999: “Romney said he will stay on as a part-timer with Bain, providing input on investment and key personnel decisions.”
Meanwhile, Daily Kos has a press release from mid-1999 that describes Romney as being “part-time.”
Can You Really be CEO with No Responsibilities?
Glenn Kessler defends
Mitt Romney’s assertion that he left the helm of Bain Capital in 1999 by arguing the language
saying he was “sole stockholder,
chairman of the board, chief executive officer, and president” was
boilerplate… there is no standard definition of a “chief executive”… no
requirement for anyone to have any responsibilities even if they have
that title.”
Brad DeLong: “It would be very unusual for somebody to have the titles… and to have no responsibilities whatsoever. In
fact, I defy Glenn Kessler to come up with any example of anybody
anywhere- — save for Mitt Romney — who has been characterized to the SEC as ‘sole stockholder, chairman of the board, chief executive officer, and
president’ and also claimed to have no responsibilities whatsoever and
to have merely been a passive investor.”
Meanwhile, BuzzFeed has a SEC filing that might be the hardest for Romney to explain.
Romney Plans Network Interviews
Mitt Romney will give interviews today with ABC News, NBC News and CBS News, Politico reports.
“The recorded interviews will take place later this afternoon, and are likely to air during the nightly news casts, though that could not be confirmed.”
Earl Long and RFK
Charlie Cook: “It’s a good bet that no authors dedicated a book ‘To Earl Long and Robert F. Kennedy’ before James Carville and Stan Greenberg penned It’s the Middle Class, Stupid! It’s an odd book, but definitely worth putting on your preconvention reading list. Indeed, for many Democrats, it will become the playbook on how to talk to voters about economic issues.”
Dog Gets Election Documents
Associated Press: “The voter registration form arrived in the mail last month with some key information already filled in: Rosie Charlston’s name was complete, as was her Seattle address. Problem is, Rosie was a black lab who died in 1998.”
What the Bain Attacks are Really About
Michael Crowley: “The current debate is really about setting battle lines for the
campaign. Above all, the Obama team is opportunistically — but also
cleverly — shaping the political debate around a subject that’s good for
them (heartless capitalism) instead of the one that’s good for Romney
(the terrible economy). Chicago is trying to define Romney — and Bain, a
company most Americans don’t really understand — on their own terms.”
“They’re also after something deeper. Attacking Bain, and Romney’s candor about his role there, is a way of
defining the Republican’s character. Modern Democrats often bemoan the
GOP’s alleged advantage in mounting character attacks. They haven’t
forgotten the way the Swift Boating of John Kerry (unfairly) undermined
Kerry’s credibility and patriotism, and the flip-flopping windsurfer
attacks that followed. This week’s Bain offensive has partly been aimed
at making Romney look slippery about a business record allegedly defined
by selfishness and greed.”
The strategy: “Keep the target on the defensive, define the political conversation, and
raise constant new ‘questions’ that can only be answered by the release
of documents — in 2004, Kerry’s military records; in this case, Romney’s
back tax returns — that promise to be complicated, hard to interpret and
sure to open the door to still more questions.”
RNC Launches Ads for Romney
The RNC will spend $5 million on television
advertisements promoting Mitt Romney’s campaign in seven states
beginning tomorrow, National Journal reports.
First Read: “This is the RNC’s first TV buy of the general election. Why is the RNC
getting into the act? Remember we told you earlier this week that the
Romney campaign is being outspent right now because it can’t use
general-election funds until after the GOP convention? Well, don’t be
surprised if the RNC is now hitting the airwaves to help make up the
difference — and more.”
Nelson Holds Narrow Lead in Florida
A new Mason-Dixon poll in Florida finds Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) holds a 5-point lead over Rep. Connie Mack (R-FL) in the U.S. Senate race, 47% to 42%.
Said pollster Brad Coker: “Anytime there’s an incumbent under 50 percent, that’s a warning sign that people are against you. The healthcare vote could be hurting Nelson.”
Bonus Quote of the Day
“The rigidity of those pledges is something I don’t like. The circumstances change and you can’t be wedded to some formula by Grover Norquist. It’s — who the hell is Grover Norquist, anyway?”
— Former President George H.W. Bush, in an interview in Parade, on Grover Norquist’s “no new tax” pledge.
Florida Lieutenant Governor Implicated in Sex Scandal
As part of her defense in a criminal trial, a former aide to Florida Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll (R) said she caught the lieutenant governor in “a compromising position” with a female aide shortly before being fired last year, the Miami Herald reports.
“The charges could prove explosive among social conservatives who form
the backbone of the Republican Party and have long admired Carroll.”
What They See on TV in a Battleground State
The NewsHour put together a video of the ads shown in a half hour of television in Virginia.
“Some, as you can see, were on more than once. Some were funded by the presidential campaigns, while others came from outside groups or super PACs. The Senate contest received nearly as much air time as the White House race. All but one of the ads were entirely negative in tone.”
The Speech that Put Condi Rice on Romney’s Short List
BuzzFeed has the audio of Condoleeza Rice’s “forceful, and surprisingly partisan, 13-minute address” that she gave to a gathering of big-money Republican donors that put her in the middle of veep speculation.
Young Voters Not As Excited About Election
A new Gallup survey finds just 58% of registered voters between the ages of 18 and 29 say they are “definitely likely” to vote, down from 78% who said they were in October 2008.
Why Romney’s Bain Explanation Makes No Sense
Steve Kornacki notes that Mitt Romney’s explanation for leaving Bain Capital only makes sense in the context of when he made it: When Romney left to run the Olympics, there was no reason for him to think he would be running for public office any time soon. In fact, he fully expected to return to his old job.
“The point here isn’t that Romney was running Bain Capital and making all of its key decisions from 1999 to 2002. But the story he tells now absolves him of all responsibility for anything and everything Bain did in those years. This would be reasonable if Romney had forged a clear and total break with the company in 1999, but he didn’t. His statement to the ballot law commission 10 years ago was supported by just about all of his actions between 1999 and 2002: Until the final few months of his Olympic tenure, Romney’s break from Bain was supposed to temporary.”
The Worst Congress Ever?
Ezra Klein: “Hating on Congress is a beloved American tradition. Hence Mark Twain’s old joke, ‘Reader, suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself.’ But the 112th Congress is no ordinary congress. It’s a very bad, no good, terrible Congress. It is, in fact, one of the very worst congresses we have ever had.”
Brown Claims Calls from Democrats
First, it was kings and queens. Now, Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) tells CNN that President Obama and other powerful Democrats are regularly phoning him to get help passing their legislation.
Said Brown: “I can name a litany of Democratic-sponsored bills that I’ve done that never would have passed hadn’t it been for me. And the president had called me, and vice president calls me, and Secretary Clinton calls asking for my vote all the time.”
But the Boston Globe reports Brown has spoken by phone with Clinton just twice during his Senate career and he’s spoken to President Obama by phone just once.
5 Ways Mitt Romney Can Rescue His Campaign
The Week looks at how Romney can get back on track.