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Monday, September 24, 2012

Foot In The Mouth Disease Spreads Around The Mitt Romney Campaign!



This CBS interview was captured by the Obama Campaign and their Democratic allies. This pathetic candidate says his tax rate is fine compared to a middle class worker paying more in taxes.

This pathetic candidate running for president is ignoring his own running mate, wife and the Republicans call to change direction.

Not much is mentioned about Republican Wisconsin congressman and vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan.

Not much is mentioned about Ann Romney, the wife of the presidential nominee.

Not much is mentioned about the policies that the Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney wants to enact if he should become the President of The United States.

In other words, you can sum it up in two words: You're ******!

It's been a train wreck of dysfunction for Mitt Romney's presidential campaign. The perennial candidate for president is overcoming a devastating week. The gaffe about 47% of the American public being "victims" dependent of government and not paying taxes was released by political foes and this has him scrambling for another

The president and Mitt Romney appeared on the Univision Latino Forum in Florida and both had an opportunity to win over undecided voters in a growing minority population.

It was reported by the liberal agitators online that the Republican nominee, threw a temper tantrum behind the scenes.

Buzzfeed, a liberal news agitating website reported that members of the Romney Campaign were upset over issues during the appearance.

Mitt Romney's campaign took a hard line with the Spanish-language network Univision, making last-minute demands in the run-up to last week's town hall that helped insure his success in the forum.

Mitt Romney's campaign took a hard line with the Spanish-language network Univision, making last-minute demands in the run-up to last week's town hall that helped insure his success in the forum

That wouldn’t be the last demand from the campaign: Romney himself almost pulled the plug on the whole thing minutes before the broadcast, Univision reporter Maria Elena Salinas said.

The looks on their faces show that Mitt Romney irked them! Univision news reporter Maria Elena Salinas claims that Mitt Romney threw a temper tantrum before he appeared onstage at last Thursday's forum.
While introducing Romney at the top of the broadcast, Salinas’s co-anchor, Jorge Ramos, noted that the Republican candidate had agreed to give the network 35 minutes, and that Obama had agreed to a full hour the next night. Ramos then invited the audience to welcome Romney to the stage — but the candidate didn’t materialize.

“It was a very awkward moment, believe me,” Salinas said.

Apparently, Romney took issue with the anchors beginning the broadcast that way, said Salinas, and he refused to go on stage until they re-taped the introduction. (One Republican present at the taping said Romney “threw a tantrum.”)

The dueling forums served as the centerpiece of a week when both candidates were working hard to appeal to Hispanic voters. In addition to his Univision appearance, Romney sat down for an interview with Telemundo, and held an energetic "Juntos con Romney" rally here, complete with Cuban salsa music, and a cameo by the candidate's Spanish-speaking son, Craig.

The Obama campaign was quick to point out that Romney spent less time on Univision than the president did, pointing to it as a symbol for the Republican's lack of commitment to Latino voters.
"Mitt Romney used the limited time he gave to Univision to evade the tough questions and reiterate positions he's taken that would disproportionately impact Latinos," said Gabriela Domenzain, accusing the Republican of championing middle class tax increases and a hardline immigration policy.

The Romney campaign, meanwhile, dismissed Democrats' crowing as an attempt to divert attention from Obama's rocky performance, during which he admitted to dropping the ball on immigration reform, and said he'd learned in office that "you can't change Washington from the inside."

One Romney aide, who requested anonymity to discuss strategy, said their campaign received no special advantage in the forums. Instead, he said, their superior crowd was proof that their strong Hispanic outreach program in the state is working.

Indeed, presidential campaigns are rarely won by the meek, and the Obama campaign's ability to provide presidential access to favored outlets is one of the cycle's most valuable resources. But the Romney camp fought harder at the critical Hispanic forum, and it appeared to pay off. Since the conventions, local Romney aides have been boasting that their Hispanic-focused ground game in the state is bigger than any Republican presidential campaign in history, with 13 full-time paid staffers and hundreds of volunteers.

What's more, one person familiar with both campaigns' media buys said Romney aired Spanish-language ads in key battleground states throughout the country during the Univision forums, while the Obama campaign remained dark in Spanish markets on those nights.

Romney has more work to do than Obama does in winning over the Latino electorate, with recent polls showing the president leading in that demographic nationally by as many as 50 percentage points. But the gap is much smaller among Florida Hispanics, who include a large, right-leaning Cuban exile minority, and the Romney aide said Obama did nothing to seal the deal in his Univision appearance Thursday.

What does this say about the perennial candidate for president?

Desperation!

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