Ryan: Romney won't 'duck tough issues' on economy

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Seizing the campaign spotlight, vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan embraced "the calling of my generation" to help lead the country in tough times Wednesday night and pledged to cheering Republican National Convention delegates and a prime time TV audience that Mitt Romney will make the bold and difficult decisions needed to repair the nation's economy.
"After four years of getting the runaround, America needs a turnaround, and the man for the job is Governor Mitt Romney," the 42-year-old Wisconsin lawmaker declared in what amounted to a national debut. He spoke at a convention dogged by Tropical Storm Isaac, downgraded from a hurricane but still inflicting misery on millions along the nearby northern Gulf Coast.
"We will not duck the tough issues; we will lead," Ryan said.
His speech was part attack on Obama, part spirited testimonial to Romney, all leavened by a loving tribute to Ryan's own mother, seated across the hall in a VIP box. "To this day, my mom is a role model," he said while she beamed and exchanged smiles with one of his children and delegates cheered.
As for Obama and the Democrats, he said they 'have run out of ideas. Their moment came and went. Fear and division is all they've got left."
To the cheers of the delegates, he pledged Republicans would save Medicare from looming bankruptcy, despite constant accusations from Democrats that the GOP approach would shred the program that provides health care to more than 30 million seniors.
"Our nation needs this debate. We want this debate. We will win this debate," Ryan declared. But he offered no details of the remedy Republicans would propose.
Romney, in a secondary role if only for a moment, accused Obama of backing "reckless defense cuts" amounting to $1 trillion. Addressing the American Legion in Indianapolis, he said, 'There are plenty of places to cut in a federal budget that now totals over $3 trillion. But defense is not one of them."
In Tampa, the Romney team scripted an economy-and-veterans-themed program and kept a wary eye on Isaac. The storm remained a threat to levees in the New Orleans area almost exactly seven years after the calamitous Hurricane Katrina.
Inside the convention hall, delegates cheered a parade of party leaders past, present and — possibly — future.
The presidents Bush, George H.W., elected in 1988, and his son, George W., winner in 2000 and 2004, were featured in an evocative video. Arizona Sen. John McCain, the party's 2008 nominee, spoke on his 76th birthday and said he wished he'd been there under different circumstances. And an array of ambitious younger elected officials preceded Ryan to the podium, Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and John Thune of South Dakota among them.
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praised the Republican ticket in a speech that made no overt mention of Obama. "Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan will rebuild us at home and inspire us to lead abroad. They will provide an answer to the question, 'Where does America stand?'"
Ryan said in excerpts released in advance that he was accepting "the calling of my generation to give our children the America that was given to us."
He added, "The present administration has made its choices. And Mitt Romney and I have made ours: Before the math and the momentum overwhelm us all, we are going to solve this nation's economic problems.
"And I'm going to level with you: We don't have much time."
As he spoke a pair of electronic boards tallied the nation's growing national debt, approaching $16 trillion overall and more than $5 billion since the convention opened.
Ryan's vice presidential acceptance speech marked a prime-time national debut by a relatively young lawmaker lauded by fellow Republicans for his understanding of the complexities of the nation's budget.
Romney tapped Ryan this month as his running mate, a selection that cheered conservatives who have doubted the presidential candidate's own commitment to their cause.
If Ryan's selection was designed in part to appeal to conservatives, the convention was scripted to strengthen the ticket's appeals among women, Hispanics and others who prefer Obama over the Republicans, as well as veterans who supported McCain in 2008.
Romney delivers his own nationally televised acceptance speech Thursday night in the final act of his own convention. The political attention then shifts to the Democrats, who open their own convention on Tuesday to nominate Obama and Vice President Joe Biden for a second term.
Deep into a two-week stretch of national gatherings, the race for the White House is in a sort of political black hole where the day-to-day polls matter little if at all as voters sort through their impressions.
Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on television commercials by the candidates, their parties and supporting groups, the race has appeared unusually close since Romney clinched his nomination last spring.
Only eight or so battleground states appear to be competitive, although Republicans say they hope to expand the campaign after Labor Day, particularly in industrial states struggling to recover from the worst economic recession since the Great Depression.
As chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan is the architect of a plan to curb long-term deficits by reducing taxes and making deep cuts in accounts ranging from farm programs to education. He also advocates saving billions from remaking Medicare and Medicaid, the government's health care programs for seniors and the poor.
The Medicare changes, in particular, are potentially incendiary in an election campaign. Democrats say that Romney, with his selection of Ryan, has accepted political ownership of a plan that would turn the program from one in which seniors' medical bills are automatically paid into one in which the government would give them checks to purchase coverage at costs that would require them to dip deeper into their pockets.
For all of the attack ads and inflammatory rhetoric, the two campaigns tiptoed carefully around the storm ravaging the Gulf Coast, vying to demonstrate concern for the victims without looking like they were seeking political gain.
Obama told an audience in Virginia he had spoken on the phone with governors and mayors of the affected states and cities while aboard Air Force One earlier in the day. Romney's aides let it be known he might visit the region once the storm had passed.
Romney's reference to $1 trillion in defense cuts was a 10-year figure that combined reductions already enacted by Congress and reductions scheduled to begin next January as a result of Congress' failure to reach agreement on a broad plan to cut deficits.
He did not say so in his speech, but most Republicans, including Ryan, voted for the first installment as well as the second.
And another convention speaker, Sen. Paul of Kentucky, pointedly disagreed with Romney on defense spending.
"Republicans must acknowledge that not every dollar spent on the military is necessary or well-spent, and Democrats must admit that domestic welfare and entitlements must be reformed," he said.
Romney's reference to 9/11 was glancing in a speech that accused Obama of unwise defense cuts. Romney noted the economy is the top issue in the race, but he said, "Our debates can change suddenly, with a ringing phone in the dead of night ... or a plume of smoke on a clear blue morning.
"The first job of government is to keep the American people safe," he said, pledging to do so.
Democrats spent part of their time working to tarnish the Republican brand. They pointed to an ABC News report that said Romney's campaign had held a reception in Tampa Tuesday night aboard a yacht flying the flag of the Cayman Islands.
Romney has been criticized for having investments there by Democrats who say the effect is to reduce his taxes.
In an appearance before University of Virginia students, Obama said he understood Republicans didn't have much nice to say about his tenure in office. He told his listeners the GOP hoped to disparage him so much that they would either vote for Romney or sit out the election.
Romney had already returned to Florida aboard his chartered jet when Senate Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky began the convention's daily battering of Obama.
"America is suffering through an economic calamity of truly historic dimensions," he said in excerpts released in advance of his convention appearance.
"Some are calling it the slowest recovery in our nation's entire 236-year history. To call this a recovery is an insult to recoveries." He spoke a few hours after the government reported economic growth for the second quarter was 1.7 percent, sluggish but marginally better than earlier estimated.
___
Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Indianapolis, Julie Pace in Charlottesville, Va., Jim Kuhnhenn in Washington and Philip Elliott, Beth Fouhy and Tamara Lush in Tampa contributed to this story
"After four years of getting the runaround, America needs a turnaround, and the man for the job is Governor Mitt Romney," the 42-year-old Wisconsin lawmaker declared in what amounted to a national debut. He spoke at a convention dogged by Tropical Storm Isaac, downgraded from a hurricane but still inflicting misery on millions along the nearby northern Gulf Coast.
"We will not duck the tough issues; we will lead," Ryan said.
His speech was part attack on Obama, part spirited testimonial to Romney, all leavened by a loving tribute to Ryan's own mother, seated across the hall in a VIP box. "To this day, my mom is a role model," he said while she beamed and exchanged smiles with one of his children and delegates cheered.
As for Obama and the Democrats, he said they 'have run out of ideas. Their moment came and went. Fear and division is all they've got left."
To the cheers of the delegates, he pledged Republicans would save Medicare from looming bankruptcy, despite constant accusations from Democrats that the GOP approach would shred the program that provides health care to more than 30 million seniors.
"Our nation needs this debate. We want this debate. We will win this debate," Ryan declared. But he offered no details of the remedy Republicans would propose.
Romney, in a secondary role if only for a moment, accused Obama of backing "reckless defense cuts" amounting to $1 trillion. Addressing the American Legion in Indianapolis, he said, 'There are plenty of places to cut in a federal budget that now totals over $3 trillion. But defense is not one of them."
In Tampa, the Romney team scripted an economy-and-veterans-themed program and kept a wary eye on Isaac. The storm remained a threat to levees in the New Orleans area almost exactly seven years after the calamitous Hurricane Katrina.
Inside the convention hall, delegates cheered a parade of party leaders past, present and — possibly — future.
The presidents Bush, George H.W., elected in 1988, and his son, George W., winner in 2000 and 2004, were featured in an evocative video. Arizona Sen. John McCain, the party's 2008 nominee, spoke on his 76th birthday and said he wished he'd been there under different circumstances. And an array of ambitious younger elected officials preceded Ryan to the podium, Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and John Thune of South Dakota among them.
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praised the Republican ticket in a speech that made no overt mention of Obama. "Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan will rebuild us at home and inspire us to lead abroad. They will provide an answer to the question, 'Where does America stand?'"
Ryan said in excerpts released in advance that he was accepting "the calling of my generation to give our children the America that was given to us."
He added, "The present administration has made its choices. And Mitt Romney and I have made ours: Before the math and the momentum overwhelm us all, we are going to solve this nation's economic problems.
"And I'm going to level with you: We don't have much time."
As he spoke a pair of electronic boards tallied the nation's growing national debt, approaching $16 trillion overall and more than $5 billion since the convention opened.
Ryan's vice presidential acceptance speech marked a prime-time national debut by a relatively young lawmaker lauded by fellow Republicans for his understanding of the complexities of the nation's budget.
Romney tapped Ryan this month as his running mate, a selection that cheered conservatives who have doubted the presidential candidate's own commitment to their cause.
If Ryan's selection was designed in part to appeal to conservatives, the convention was scripted to strengthen the ticket's appeals among women, Hispanics and others who prefer Obama over the Republicans, as well as veterans who supported McCain in 2008.
Romney delivers his own nationally televised acceptance speech Thursday night in the final act of his own convention. The political attention then shifts to the Democrats, who open their own convention on Tuesday to nominate Obama and Vice President Joe Biden for a second term.
Deep into a two-week stretch of national gatherings, the race for the White House is in a sort of political black hole where the day-to-day polls matter little if at all as voters sort through their impressions.
Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on television commercials by the candidates, their parties and supporting groups, the race has appeared unusually close since Romney clinched his nomination last spring.
Only eight or so battleground states appear to be competitive, although Republicans say they hope to expand the campaign after Labor Day, particularly in industrial states struggling to recover from the worst economic recession since the Great Depression.
As chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan is the architect of a plan to curb long-term deficits by reducing taxes and making deep cuts in accounts ranging from farm programs to education. He also advocates saving billions from remaking Medicare and Medicaid, the government's health care programs for seniors and the poor.
The Medicare changes, in particular, are potentially incendiary in an election campaign. Democrats say that Romney, with his selection of Ryan, has accepted political ownership of a plan that would turn the program from one in which seniors' medical bills are automatically paid into one in which the government would give them checks to purchase coverage at costs that would require them to dip deeper into their pockets.
For all of the attack ads and inflammatory rhetoric, the two campaigns tiptoed carefully around the storm ravaging the Gulf Coast, vying to demonstrate concern for the victims without looking like they were seeking political gain.
Obama told an audience in Virginia he had spoken on the phone with governors and mayors of the affected states and cities while aboard Air Force One earlier in the day. Romney's aides let it be known he might visit the region once the storm had passed.
Romney's reference to $1 trillion in defense cuts was a 10-year figure that combined reductions already enacted by Congress and reductions scheduled to begin next January as a result of Congress' failure to reach agreement on a broad plan to cut deficits.
He did not say so in his speech, but most Republicans, including Ryan, voted for the first installment as well as the second.
And another convention speaker, Sen. Paul of Kentucky, pointedly disagreed with Romney on defense spending.
"Republicans must acknowledge that not every dollar spent on the military is necessary or well-spent, and Democrats must admit that domestic welfare and entitlements must be reformed," he said.
Romney's reference to 9/11 was glancing in a speech that accused Obama of unwise defense cuts. Romney noted the economy is the top issue in the race, but he said, "Our debates can change suddenly, with a ringing phone in the dead of night ... or a plume of smoke on a clear blue morning.
"The first job of government is to keep the American people safe," he said, pledging to do so.
Democrats spent part of their time working to tarnish the Republican brand. They pointed to an ABC News report that said Romney's campaign had held a reception in Tampa Tuesday night aboard a yacht flying the flag of the Cayman Islands.
Romney has been criticized for having investments there by Democrats who say the effect is to reduce his taxes.
In an appearance before University of Virginia students, Obama said he understood Republicans didn't have much nice to say about his tenure in office. He told his listeners the GOP hoped to disparage him so much that they would either vote for Romney or sit out the election.
Romney had already returned to Florida aboard his chartered jet when Senate Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky began the convention's daily battering of Obama.
"America is suffering through an economic calamity of truly historic dimensions," he said in excerpts released in advance of his convention appearance.
"Some are calling it the slowest recovery in our nation's entire 236-year history. To call this a recovery is an insult to recoveries." He spoke a few hours after the government reported economic growth for the second quarter was 1.7 percent, sluggish but marginally better than earlier estimated.
___
Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Indianapolis, Julie Pace in Charlottesville, Va., Jim Kuhnhenn in Washington and Philip Elliott, Beth Fouhy and Tamara Lush in Tampa contributed to this story
Five biggest lies told by Ryan:
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/08/ryan-risks-reputation-with-misleading-nomination-speech.php?ref=fpa
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And here is the kicker. The lies were so blatant that even Fox News called him out on it.
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/08/30/paul-ryans-speech-in-three-words/
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So basically the Romney/Ryan campaign is
We are not going to tell you about us and release those tax forms like everyone else (including his father) has done
We are going to lie and make things up about Obama
Fact don't matter
http://www.buzzfeed.com/bensmith/romney-camp-bets-welfare-attack
and we are going to rig the election process to help us win
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/08/13/michael-tomasky-on-how-the-gop-plans-to-block-the-black-vote.html
and
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o32tF-S6K60
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Tell me republicans, when you have to lie, ignore facts, and rig elections to win, at what point to you admit that your ideas just suck?
Pretty much what all politicians do. Nice how your biased to just one lying side though.
 @T H I S You do understand that the author of this Fox "opinion" link is liberal columnist Sally Kohn. Which is normal for Fox to provide opinion from both sides neither of which may be factual.
 @al_wa so then he did not just make crap up? Please delineate it for everyone.Â
Â
 @T H I S http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials/083012-624188-so-called-fact-checks-disguise-media-liberal-agenda.htm?src=HPLNews
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Sorry, the facts don't support your agenda.
@T H I S the bull-puckey meter on Ryan was off the charts. At points, it was laughable. But in politics, if you're a young, good looking dude, it almost doesn't matter what you say.Â
It is well established that the United States has collapsed economically, socially, politically, legally, constitutionally, environmentally, and morally. The country that exists today is not even a shell of the country it was when I was born due to the money whores from both right wing parties that are charged with representing the middle class. Neither of these parties is going to be any help to the 40% of the US population, the 40% less well off, own 0.3%, that is, three-tenths of one percent, of Americaâs personal wealth. Who owns the other 99.7%?
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It is our patriotic duty to save this country from further thefts and attacks on our middle class citizens and their children by these theives. We need to get rid of these full time sheisters and put working middle class Americans (If there's any left) in office!Â
This is also said by a man who couldn't run the numbers to his own budget and claimed that his campaign didn't need fact checkers. I have so much more faith in them now.
Well good to know, than maybe he can start by explaining the FRAUD he has commited over the last few months?
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We believe Mitt Romney is hightly capable of straightening this mess out ( the mess our country is in - we all know what that is), And by Mitt's decision to choose Ryan shows he (Mitt) has very good judgement. No Doubt.
 @nunaboona There is not much left of that chicken is there?Â
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/too obscure?
Thank God Ryan & Mitt arrived on the scene. "Right On" speech! We are with you!Â
As far as Ryan goes,
there is this little thing
http://2012.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/08/paul-ryan-slams-obama-for-not-saving-auto-plant----in-2008.php
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Hey blamed Obama for an Auto plant that closed.... in 2008.... when Bush was still president.Â
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So yeah, you wonder why we keep blaming Bush? Because we have to keep reminding the conservatives that they things they keep trying to hang around Obama's neck happened before he was elected.Â
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I mean, unless Obama used his magic time machine or something.
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@T H I S -- Way to put words in someone's mouth and then claim they lied! Ryan said, "When he talked about change, many people liked the sound of it, especially in Janesville, where we were about to lose a major factory." Yes, the plant was scheduled in 2008 to shut down in 2009. He was NOT blaming Obama for that.
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What he was blaming Obama for was the promise that, with government help, the factory would stay open for another hundred years.
 @HeebieJeebies Well maybe if the plant had stayed open until Obama actually because president, he could have saved it with that bailout that was so popular with republicans.
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Ryan is awfully proud of himself but apparently his pride doesn't include his sponsorship of a personhood amendment that would require rape victims to bear the child of their rapist. Surely he would mention this stunning bit of forward thinking. The fact that he forgot to mention it was probably just an oversight, he was likely much too busy lying about Obama ending work/work training requirements for welfare and Obama cutting $715 billion from Medicare.Â
 @kennewickmanÂ
Remember sir, they are not goign to let fectcheckers get in the way of their campaign.
Â
http://www.mediaite.com/online/romney-pollster-we-wont-let-our-campaign-be-dictated-by-fact-checkers/
FTA:
"We will not duck the tough issues; we will lead," Ryan said.
------------------------------------------------------------
The dude can't even release his tax returns like Obama has done, his own father has done, and pretty much every presidential candidate has done.Â
If he can't man up to this, how is he goign to be tough on anything else?
 @T H I S But when you find out that mitt was caught and had to close the Swiss account and pay taxes ..
And sign an admission of guilt to be put in his IRS file or be tried as tax thief..
And agree to Not commit tax evasion to the IRS as well or All back door agreement with the IRS are OFF the table. and could Still be tried for tax evasion...
Well he will never release those tax returns..
And if he did he would never become president..
You must be talking about Romney? It was never an issue for Ryan. Quite frankly, I could careless whether Obama, Romney, or Mickey mouse release their tax returns. We all do as much as we can to pay as little as we can to the most wasteful government ever.
What I want to know is how this countries problems are going to be solved. Not whether 1-10 years of W-2's are produced.
 I don't care how much money Obama or Romeny make annually. If you're successful then thats great. If you're not then its fine too. But don't punish the successful just because you're jealous.
 @Muk115 The issue is one of integrity. Romney has none.
This is why Obama will win. Â The GOP voters will not go vote for Romney because they like him but because they don't like Obama. Â I know some out there may not think this means a whole lot...go ask John Kerry. Â I begged and pleaded for the Dems to pick someone else because he didn't inspire anyone to vote for him because they really believed in John Kerry, they where just voting against Bush.
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I'll Say this, Romney isn't inspiring...at all. Â
Romney=KerryÂ
So true on so many levels.Â
Â
This is why they are pressing all the social issue though, to try and get the bas wired up to vote. The republicans actually used this in 2004 to help defeat Kerry because Bush didn't have a lot of support at that point either. Â
The thing is, this is not 2004, and the republicans have pushed the issues past the point of crazy and have wound up the left even more than their own base.
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 @T H I S The GOP used to be very unified.  This is the most dis-jointed I have ever seen them.  They have been trying to unify under the defeat Obama banner but there are too many groups that want to go in different directions.  It's going to be hard for them to really get those undecided voters if they are unorganized.
 @Rema Cyphers  @T H I S They gave up their principals for power.  Then the power corrupted them.
 @T H I S  @DeadRabitz Don't forget that they are no longer upholding the same principals their Party once upheld, and this trend started with Regan. Any Republican president before him was better than the last batch we've had, bar none.
 @DeadRabitz there is actually a great write up here about the current state of the GOP.
http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/08/2012-or-never-for-gops-white-base.html
Their biggest problem, from a pure strategic stand point, is that they kinda blew their energy in 2009-2010 when the freaked out about Obama before he really even did anything. Â
Â
Now its time to make a change, and they are kind of out of energy, their only choice has a history that makes him not so unlike Obama (healthcare, pro-choice, banning guns, civil union), and, they just can not keep up with the rhetoric any more.Â
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