Democrats: GOP's Romney just 'doesn't get it'

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Democrats ridiculed Republican Mitt Romney as a millionaire candidate for president who "quite simply doesn't get it" and worse on Tuesday, opening night of a national convention aimed at propelling Barack Obama to re-election despite high unemployment and national economic distress.
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix the sputtering economy, said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the convention keynote speaker, sharing the prime-time spotlight with first lady Michelle Obama.
After the deep recession, Castro said in excerpts released in advance of his speech, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition." He said 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office.
Obama was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia earlier in the day. He said he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. And during the day there was ample evidence of an underperforming economy, from a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month to the Treasury's announcement that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place - except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
"He said he'd take out bin Laden, and with our great SEAL team, he did," added Tim Kaine, former national party chairman and Virginia governor, now running for the Senate.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy - and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
A few hours later and hundreds of miles distant, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, the Democratic party chairwoman, opened the three-day convention to the cheers of delegates.
The Time Warner Cable Arena's conversion to the Democrats' made-for-television convention hall was complete. The lectern rested on a blue-carpeted stage, inside a circle of white stars suggestive of the presidential seal.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
To laughter from his Virginia audience, Obama explained why he was ceding the opening-night spotlight to his wife.
"A political convention is "just like a relay, and you start off with the fastest person," he said.
"So I'm going to be at home and I'm going to be watching it with our girls. And I'm going to try not to let them see their daddy cry, because when Michelle starts talking I start getting all misty."
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night - or for any other. Polls show the first lady is more popular than her husband.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday night, the same night that former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
Officials said Republicans were stockpiling cash for the fall campaign. Romney raised more than $100 million for the third month in a row in August, officials said.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
9/4/2012 5:06:16 PM (GMT -7:00)
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix the sputtering economy, said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the convention keynote speaker, sharing the prime-time spotlight with first lady Michelle Obama.
After the deep recession, Castro said in excerpts released in advance of his speech, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition." He said 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office.
Obama was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia earlier in the day. He said he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. And during the day there was ample evidence of an underperforming economy, from a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month to the Treasury's announcement that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place - except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
"He said he'd take out bin Laden, and with our great SEAL team, he did," added Tim Kaine, former national party chairman and Virginia governor, now running for the Senate.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy - and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
A few hours later and hundreds of miles distant, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, the Democratic party chairwoman, opened the three-day convention to the cheers of delegates.
The Time Warner Cable Arena's conversion to the Democrats' made-for-television convention hall was complete. The lectern rested on a blue-carpeted stage, inside a circle of white stars suggestive of the presidential seal.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
To laughter from his Virginia audience, Obama explained why he was ceding the opening-night spotlight to his wife.
"A political convention is "just like a relay, and you start off with the fastest person," he said.
"So I'm going to be at home and I'm going to be watching it with our girls. And I'm going to try not to let them see their daddy cry, because when Michelle starts talking I start getting all misty."
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night - or for any other. Polls show the first lady is more popular than her husband.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday night, the same night that former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
Officials said Republicans were stockpiling cash for the fall campaign. Romney raised more than $100 million for the third month in a row in August, officials said.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
9/4/2012 5:06:16 PM (GMT -7:00)
The party of me me me, just doesn't get.Its the economy stupid !
 @Tacobender 49 Correct, Mitt is and was an idiot You were spot on!!
 @Tacobender 49 That's the GOP for you! From surplus to record deficits. Two wars we didn't need also based on lies, etc., etc.  The laughing stock of the world with bush as the president. He brought our country to the closest it has ever gotten to another depression.
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All is well now now that a Democrat is in office despite the Grover Norquist pledge of the grand obstructionist party. He'll soon be reelected easily. No comparison to the outsourcer and tax evader mitt running for office. Hopefully we'll get a majority back in the house too and can finally get government working again along with the middle class Americans looking for work.Â
 @HallandOates  @Tacobender 49 lets point out what obama has done for us...... in just 3 1/2 years of being in office he has raised our debt by 9 trillion dollars, He has also gutted welfare meaning that you no longer have to be looking for a job or have a part time job in order to collect welfare benefits, he has provided us with a steady 8% unemployment rate, which by the way is the biggest percent we have had since the great depression. Lets see what else oh he decides to sell guns to drug lords and criminals in mexico which were then used to kill a U.S border patrol agent on american soil and refuses to take responsibility for selling the guns or handing over the documents to congress that give details to operation fast and furious. Lets see he has also givin us the biggest tax increase in our nations history with his obamacare which is just gonna downgrade our quality of health and if you don't have healthcare you can be thrown in jail for it. Obama hates capitalism, he has already pointed that out by saying and I qoute...... " If you have a small business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen." and dont say he was talking about roads and b ridges cause we all know he was not and even if he was roads and bridges do not make a successful business. Plus all roads and bridges are TAX PAYER FUNDED and built by PRIVATE CONTRACTORS not government contractors, and business owners pay more in taxes then people that do not own a business, so pretty much they did help make that happen. And mitt is such a bad guy for being rich, for making something of himself instead of depending on government programs to get him through life.
 @takingamericaback Almost all of what you posted is a complete lie and FAUX talking point, but thank you for wasting everyone's time.
 @HallandOates  @Tacobender 49 All is well? Really? Clinton that great Democrat that created the surplus you're speaking of struck down Glass/Steagal. You know that piece of legislation that kept banks from gambling with money that's not theirs on toxic loans and dividends. How much do you read up on stuff pal. Neither party has done anything for us since Kennedy, so your point is an empty one.
If ya got no offense, ya play defense.
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Everything this adminstration has touched has been a failure. What else do ya do?
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Lie, cheat, and steal. The liberal mantra.
 @bobalouie That's the GOP for you! From surplus to record deficits. Two wars we didn't need also based on lies, etc., etc.  The laughing stock of the world with bush as the president. All is well now now that a Democrat is in office.  He'll soon be reelected easily. No comparison to the outsourcer and tax evader mitt running for office.Â
 @bobalouie isn't that what you are doing right now? = )
Not a pack cround less half of the venue is full? People not buying in to the hope and change?
 @wynooheeman Need some glasses? Looks pretty packed to my eyes. A little early perhaps.Â
 @wynooheeman Wow, is that English?
 @Illuminati  @wynooheeman how dare you make fun of him not speaking proper english, you should be ashamed of yourself he is a person to and you are not better then he is...... isn't that what the left says when conservatives don't want illegal immigrants ere that do not speak english as well?
 @wynooheeman This is America you don't need to speak english here!
 Honestly, I can't think of one person that i know who can claim they're better off today than 4 years ago.
@Brokesince08 -- So true. While I am no worse off than I was four years ago (the credit is all mine NOT Obama's or the government's), I am certainly no better off.   Many of my Obama supporter friends have commented recently how they are worse off today then they were when he took office. Nevertheless, they have said they will vote for him again. Stupid is as stupid does, I guess.Â
 @Bianca So, in one breath you say you are no worse off and Obama gets no credit, but your friends ARE worse off and it's Obama's fault. Can't have it both ways. You are right about stupid though. YOU ARE STUPID!!
 @Brokesince08 must not have a lot of friends... not your fault! Its okay! You seem like a nice person. Don't count yourself out like that.
@BeHappy Friends, i have plenty of...unlike your facebook kind. What i lack is the opportunity to use my skillset to continue to provide for my family as i have the past 20 years.
I voted for the man with hope, change, and history in mind......doubly so against a man who seemed a wee bit removed. I got my email from Michele today, as well as Patrick Gaspard, once again asking for more money. Don't they get it? Obama is not the man I was promised. He had the house, and senate, yet still blamed others, as he does today, for his failure to deliver what he himself said if he could not (deliver) we should not vote for him. I'm not. I'll vote, as of now, for a person who has made economics a success, and hope his leadership can provide the directions to get people back to work. Every other platform issue is moot if the country collapses economically.... none of those issues will be addressed, period, so focus firstly on what we need done as a nation, jobs, he has failed me.......I'll keep my 3 bucks Michelle and buy a half gallon of gas if you don't mind.
It all boils down to one of Biden's favorite three letter words J-O-B-S! Obama is toast.
 @ByeByeBarry Ooooooooooooops
Loved that Clint Eastwood speech.Â
You know what is really interesting? How many voters realize within the last three hours, our deficit topped 16 trillion dollars? When are the people going to realize that Obama has got to take responsibility for some of this? If you have kids, you better think twice about who you vote for.   Living in this state as a conservative is very difficult because I'm surrounded by idiots who think spending our country into oblivion is OK. My job requires me to speak with people outside of this state and RARELY does someone say anything positive about this current party or their leader. Remember, you live in what I refer to as a spendocratic state and surrounded by progressive liberals. This is not like anywhere else. If you have kids, you better think about another four more years of this administration.    Don't be duped AGAIN.Â
@ObsidianOne What's worse is these 2 parties will spend over one trillion dollars on this election campaign. Don't be duped yourself. Neither of these parties will decrease the deficit. Time for real change. A new political party that isn't far right or far left.
It just started and already it has quite a different feeling and atmosphere than that of the GOP convention. The poor GOP. A dying political party running out of old white cranky men. The demographics are changing my friends! Â
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http://www.c-span.org/DNC/Events/Cory-Booker-at-the-2012-Democratic-National-Convention/C3811699/
"Dems open convention playing defense of Obama"
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Wouldn't have to be playing anything had Obama only did what he told his base he would do. Nobody cornered him or forced him to make those promisses. He is a liar and I am beginning to believe the US deserves him for a president.
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http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/09/04/793041/charts-yes-were-better-off-than-we-were-four-years-ago/
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http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/11324-the-week-of-living-dangerously
If you want to find out about Obama just go see 2016.
 @hi61izq lol Bill Maher destroyed the clown who directed that movie on his show last Friday.  Really had him tripping all over his words.
   @hi61izq The movie was such trash. Film credits gave it TERRIBLE reviews. Just a crappy movie.Â
"We've got some truth telling to do," Warner told Florida delegates at a breakfast meeting. "America is better off today than it was four years ago when this president took over."
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Cue laughter...
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What next? Sending out The Affirmative Action Native American Imposter Warren out to make the case on the morning talk shows?
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They did? Really?
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They must have read "The Republicans' Guide To Coug-ing Elections"
Speaking of Warren, here is the latest poll from Massachusetts on her downward spiral against "Chippendale" Brown:
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Brown: 47.1%
Warren: 42.9%
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 @Sid Vishess Ummm, you do realize it wasn't even close, correct moron?
A few questions for Democrats. After what Obama himself called a "shellacking" in the 2010 mid-term elections what could possibly make you think Obama is going to win re-election? What has changed since then? If the American people approved of the job Obama and Democrats were doing then they would not have handed the Democrats the biggest mid-term election landslide loss in 70 years? Why did the Democrats suffer that humiliating defeat? The American people were mad about Obamacare, out of control spending, jobs, and the federal deficit. So I ask you again, what has changed so much since the mid-term elections that the American people would give Obama a second shot after firing nearly everyone that helped Obama push through his agenda? Let me remind you just how humiliating your mid-term loss was and bear in mind it would have been worse had more Democrat seats been up for election.
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When Obama took office Democrats held:
⢠56 Senate seats. It is 51 now (plus two independents who align mostly with the Democrats).
⢠257 seats in the House of Representatives. It is 190 now (there are also three vacancies for seats last held by Democrats).
⢠29 of the 50 governorships. It is 20 now.
⢠4,073 state legislative seats. It is 3,319 now.
Sould be no contest, the Republicans have shown their true lack of color. They have proved without a doubt that they are the White Man's Party, Libs, progressives, minorities, veterans, the sick, the old, women, poor and low income and anyone else that doesn't believe only in the White Mans causes need not apply for inclusion unless you can bankroll their next campaign.
 @left-center Why do demorats hate white people.
 @CrankyPanky  hahaha They don't. Just ignorant & greedy white people.Â
 @CrankyPanky  @left-center LOL. Who hates white people? I am white. :)
 @left-center Progressives aren't welcome in the Republican Party?Â
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No (stuff) Sherlock...
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 @HallandOates  @Sid Vishess  @left-center Hall - have you heard their is a Hall and Oats PAC? Â
 @Sid Vishess  @left-center You wouldn't pay me to become a member of the GOP. As a vet and college educated adult, no way in hell would I ever go to the dark side. Sorry Darth. I can't go for that, no, no.  No can do!Â
 @left-center The Grand Obstructionist Party is a dying party as the demographics of the US are changing. Sorry GOPers. Buh bye!Â
Smart people do not wote in the USA,White House and Congress do not ask opinion from ordinary  people
Harold and Kumar Escape the DNC!
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/09/04/790461/democratic-mayor-exposes-tea-partys-deficit-hypocrisy/
This comment has been deleted
 @John Tits ha ha ha. LOL! "5th grade level?"  That's why it's a proven fact that those that subscribe to the democratic party are much more educated than those who call themselves republicans. Don't you love education?  LOL indeed!Â
 @HallandOates  @John Tits HallandOates is the smartest person in the world everyone knows that.
 @John Tits Tit for tat!  Touche! Educate yourself my friend.Â
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/topoftheticket/la-na-tt-brown-christie-20120904,0,5085391.story