WASHINGTON
(AP) — Mitt Romney sought to get his campaign back on track Tuesday
after the revelation of a video in which he said nearly half of
Americans "believe they are victims," are dependent on the government
and bound to vote for President Barack Obama. The Obama campaign worked
to spread the quotes to any voters who hadn't already heard them.
Obama himself headed for New York for an appearance on David Letterman's TV couch and a fundraiser with Beyoncé and Jay-Z.
Romney planned no apology but was expected to respond to questions
about the video by reinforcing the reaction he delivered Monday night:
that Obama favors "a government-centered society" with people dependent
on public support.
Obama's campaign, seeing an opportunity to build on its earlier
efforts to cast the Republican as out of touch with average Americans,
emailed a fundraising appeal to supporters and posted a video online
asking voters to watch Romney's comments and respond.
"I actually felt sick to my stomach," one woman says in the web video.
Another woman says, "That's not somebody who I'm thinking, 'Oh, I want him as my president.'"
Romney advisers concede the video came at a bad time — seven weeks
before Election Day and with early voting beginning in two dozen states
by this weekend. They acknowledge the remarks may dominate news coverage
for days but dispute the notion that Romney's comments could
fundamentally change the election.
The unscripted moment was reminiscent of the 2008 campaign, when
Obama was caught telling the wealthy wing of his party at a private
fundraiser in San Francisco that some residents of depressed rural areas
get bitter and "cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who
aren't like them."
In the Romney video, recorded at a Florida fundraiser in May, the
candidate says 47 percent of Americans don't pay taxes and believe they
are entitled to extensive government support. "My job is not to worry
about those people," he said.
After the video posted late Monday afternoon on Mother Jones
magazine's website, Romney told reporters that while his comments were
"not elegantly stated," he stood by his remarks.
"Those who are reliant on government are not as attracted to my
message of slimming down the size of government," Romney said in Costa
Mesa, Calif., doubling down on his statement.
Romney running mate Paul Ryan focused on the limited-government
argument while campaigning in New Hampshire, without mentioning the
video. He mistakenly called it the "Ryan-Romney plan" for a stronger
middle class before correcting himself and promising the two would put
Americans back to work rather than encourage dependency on government.
Vice President Joe Biden, campaigning in Iowa, declined to comment on
the video. "I'll let his words speak for themselves," Biden said while
shaking hands with voters after a speech in Ottumwa.
A pro-Obama super political action committee quickly pushed up the
air date for a new television advertisement in response to the video.
The ad, from Priorities USA Action, was previously shown online and
never mentions the Romney video because it was produced before it became
public. But the super PAC says it believes the ad's message serves as a
counter to the Republican nominee's words and bought time to begin
airing it as early as Tuesday on stations in Colorado, Florida, Iowa,
Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin.
"Doesn't Mitt Romney understand we can't rebuild America by tearing
down the middle class?" the narrator says. The group also is likely to
start running new ads using Romney's words from the fundraising video.
Obama was told about the video Monday afternoon by staff traveling
with him on a campaign trip to Ohio. White House Press Secretary Jay
Carney declined to say whether Obama had watched the video or to
characterize the president's reaction to Romney's remarks.
"Setting aside what Gov. Romney thinks, I can tell you that the
president certainly doesn't think that men and women on Social Security
are irresponsible or victims, that students are irresponsible or are
victims," Carney said.
The president has not publicly commented on the video, but could do
so Tuesday when he tapes an interview with David Letterman and delivers
remarks at a fundraiser at the Waldorf Astoria hotel. After that, Obama
was set to collect nearly $4 million at a $40,000-a-ticket fundraiser at
a Manhattan nightclub with husband and wife musicians Jay-Z and
Beyonce.
Romney had no public appearances scheduled Tuesday and planned to
raise money in Salt Lake City and in Dallas with former first lady Laura
Bush at the Bushes' Texas home.
Looking to change the subject, Romney's campaign rolled out a new
television ad featuring a mother and infant, aimed at cutting into
Obama's advantage with female voters. It argued that Obama's economic
policies would make women's lives harder.
In the video, Romney said 47 percent of Americans pay no income tax.
About 46 percent of Americans owed no federal income tax in 2011,
although many of them paid other forms of taxes. More than 16 million
elderly Americans avoid federal income taxes solely because of tax
breaks that apply only to seniors, according to the nonpartisan Tax
Policy Center.
In the clip released by Mother Jones, Romney also is asked about the
"Palestinian problem." He gives a rambling response, then says "the
Palestinians have no interest whatsoever in establishing peace" and "the
pathway to peace is almost unthinkable to accomplish."
Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved.