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The Great Debate
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Romney’s stated policies in business during the first presidential debate: champion the growth and development for the middle class. Until now, Romney’s position was widely perceived as one of the biggest enemies to the middle class. One of his most powerful moments during the debate was the contrast he illustrated between the president’s decision to finance the five big banks, while allowing small banks to fail across America. Some credit should be given to the president, however, for his short-term policies to save the banks, and the wise business decision to make interest from the banks that were save through the bailout.

It is clear that Romney's business experience empowered him with practical solutions for the restoration of the US economy. There was a glaring contrast between President Obama and Mitt Romney during the debate. Mitt Romney's philosophy is a better friend to the middle class than Obama’s. The American people now must decide whether Obama's experience and philosophy can provide a more sustained exit from our current recession. Romney's recent statement about the 47% of the population should be filtered through the lens of his business philosophy and business practices. Welfare is not a disgrace, but should be a transition. Business Friendly policies that are transparent and fair are color and gender blind. Romney was passionate and compassionate about his determination in what he called helping "the hurting people." You can mask your philosophy for a season but eventually it will be exposed. President Obama's philosophy on the economy is severely flawed and leads to a culture of entitlement rather a culture of earning, which is what actually makes and will continue to make America great. The entitlement culture creates a you-owe-me mentality, an addiction to the welfare economy. Access through fair policies, diligence and innovation creates and cultivates an ardent desire to dominate our US and global economy. A welfare state cannot preserve or protect the legacy of our country that stands tall among nations as the greatest economic engine ever known to mankind. The consensus seems to be that Romney overwhelmingly won the debate. I think it was a slight victory in terms of debate performance, but, in terms of significance, a slight victory is more than it sounds. Romney hasn’t had much of a chance to speak directly to the American people. He has been mediated by spin for a year. A good performance in the first prime time debate can make up for a lot of that, and help overcome some of the advantages that all incumbents necessarily have. Romney got a full five minutes less in airtime than the President, and often had to struggle to get rebuttals in. I would much prefer a Lincoln-Douglas style debate, or even a simple conversation. Put the two men on stage, sit them down with a timer, and let them simply talk directly to Americans. The President’s biggest weakness was his ability to stay focused. Governor Romney subtly mocked this at one point. The President didn’t seem to know for sure what he was trying to say. He was forced—and willingly accepted—to defend the IPAB! When you’re defending the IPAB, you’re doing it wrong. The President seems to think that it’s 2008 again, and not because he talked about George Bush (he didn’t mention that unutterable name, anymore than he mentioned Voldemort). Why hasn’t he done the things he says we ought to do? It’s not good enough simply to say that the Republicans control the House of Representatives: for the first two years, Obama had his hands on all the levers of the federal government. And even if the Republicans did control Congress, why is the President so weak that he can do nothing despite it? Why won’t there be four more years of gridlock if he’s re-elected? The President’s complaints about the existence of Republicans in Congress sounds a lot like “this job is too hard for me.” CBS news assembled 500 people for a poll after the debate: Romney won by a 2 to 1 margin. He did a great job, and should take a great deal of confidence with him on the campaign trail. The Vice-Presidential debate is next, on October 11. I can’t wait. If Ryan can thoroughly beat Biden—which no one, even the most confident Democrats doubts—then the Republicans can regain some momentum.

An entrepreneur and third-generation Republican, Williams was formerly vice president for governmental and international affairs public relations firm, B&C Associations. Williams now hosts a nationally syndicated TV program called The Right Side, and the nightly radio show "The Armstrong Williams Show."
  • noway123456789

    Romney won the debate hands down; by running away from the policies he’s been proposing all year. He almost felt moderate. Great job, Mitt!
    Obama, weak as always, didn’t bother to put up any sort of fight against his Republican challenger, but then again, can anyone be surprised? It’s been like that since day 1. It’s all compromise and hoping he won’t offend. Bush tax cuts? Extended. The great health care overhaul? A completely Republican plan. Not appointing Elizabeth Warren to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau? Done. Continuing the drone strikes? Done. Hell, done way over the top. Push through the weakest financial reform and regulation, so weak it wouldn’t even have caused Reagan or Thatcher to look up from their desks, yet pretend it was historic regulatory reform? Done
    To everyone who thought it inexplicable that Obama didn’t bother to point out Romney’s lies on even such important issues as the deficit, or that Obama didn’t even throw in the Bain issue or the 47% issue, or that Obama failed to mention things like the auto-bailout, which like it or not is very popular in some of the more important swingstates: it’s not inexplicable. It’s the same we’ve seen from this man for the past three years. He’s no communist, or scary marxist, or true progressive. He’s a slightly-barely-left-of-center politician who’s compromised on so many issues already, it’s like having a Republican in the White House.

 

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