More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Chris Weigant

GET UPDATES FROM Chris Weigant
 

Romney's "Very Poor" Choice of Words

Posted: 02/ 6/2012 8:47 pm

I'm in this race because I care about Americans. I'm not concerned about the very poor -- we have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich -- they're doing just fine. I'm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90 to 95 percent of Americans who right now are struggling. ... I'm not concerned about the very poor that have a safety net, but if it has holes in it, then I will repair it.

-- Mitt Romney, in an interview with CNN's Soledad O'Brien

Mitt Romney's gaffe last week (reproduced in full, above) is going to wind up the "gaffe that keeps on giving" for Barack Obama and the Democrats in this election cycle. Because the more Romney's comment is examined and dissected, the worse it looks for him. This could, in fact, be the defining moment for Mitt Romney as a national political presence. That phrase is often bandied about in politics, but I use it here in the full literal sense of "defining moment" -- a point in time which absolutely cements an image in the public mind of who you are and what you stand for as a politician. The image, quite obviously, is not a good one for Romney.

The statement caused an initial media frenzy, which almost exclusively focused on the sound bite -- "I'm not concerned about the very poor" -- which was being spliced into Democratic ads before the sun had even set. Even Newt Gingrich piled on that part of Romney's statement, fulminating that anyone running for president should have the good sense to be concerned with all Americans (or at least say so in public, for Pete's sake). This is Politics 101, folks, and the fact that it took Newt Gingrich to point it out to Romney was highly amusing to Lefties everywhere.

Romney desperately tried to spin his statement, and wound up floundering: "You've got to take the whole sentence, all right, as opposed to saying -- and then change it just a little bit, because then it sounds very different." Um, well, that would be true of just about any political gaffe, wouldn't it? If you got to go back and re-edit your own words in such a manner, then gaffes wouldn't even exist. Unfortunately for Mitt, they do.

Romney, of course, is going to complain loudly when the "not concerned about the very poor" soundbite is used against him in ads, but he simply has no leg to stand on when it comes to "context." He has no credibility on the subject, and no moral high road to take. He has already, in this election, run an ad of Barack Obama saying: "If we keep talking about the economy, we're going to lose." What Obama said -- with context -- was actually the exact opposite: "Senator McCain's campaign actually said, and I quote, if we keep talking about the economy, we're going to lose." Romney's campaign, when the ad came out, defended its use, saying "We used that quote intentionally." So good luck begging for context in political ads now, guys.

Even more unfortunately for Mitt, the out-of-touch and elitist image this gaffe conjures up is exactly the image a lot of folks already had of Romney. He appears to many as the type of guy who has no idea who the "very poor" are, or how they live. The only way a guy like Mitt Romney interacts with poor people -- when not actually on the campaign trail -- is either in an employer/employee relationship (as with the domestic help in his multiple houses) or a patron/servant relationship (the valet parking his car, the busboy clearing his table, or perhaps a ski lift operator). Neither breeds any sort of real understanding of what it is like to occupy this rung of the social ladder in Mitt -- or, for that matter, the fears many middle-class folks have of being one financial emergency away from a dive headfirst into that safety net. The man has lived in a bubble for almost his entire life -- and it shows.

But while most of the attention so far has been focused on the "out of touch" nature of Mitt's "very poor" choice of words, the real damage to Mitt as a Republican candidate stems from how he attempted to explain what he really meant. Ignore the soundbite/gaffe part of Mitt's statement, and things get even worse for him among his party's base. Chalk this one up as a victory for the Occupy Wall Street movement, because all of a sudden the Republican Party as a whole was having a debate about their party's poverty policies. In a million years, I never could have imagined that happening without the outside force of the Occupiers changing the frame of the nation's political debate. Think about it: when is the last time any Republican used the word "poor" in any political speech? For the life of me, I certainly can't remember it, unless it was some part of George W. Bush's "compassionate conservatism" flim-flam that my subconscious has just completely blocked out.

Which brings me to my main point -- Mitt's explanation for his bad soundbite was extraordinary because it used the framing of Democrats. Mitt is arguing his point on a field created and defended by Democrats -- not the usual Republican language. This is stunning, because Republicans are normally so adept at speaking of just about any issue in their own private terminology. It's also stunning because it is such a losing position for Romney to take.

First, the language. Republicans never say "poor" (as I've already mentioned) much less "very poor." As far as conservatives are concerned, poor people either (1) deserve what they get in life because of their own bad choices, (2) are lazy and cheating the system to get a free ride through life, or (3) are budding conservative heroes, because we all live in a Horatio Alger novel and just need to grasp strongly on those bootstraps and pull.

But Mitt's bigger error wasn't saying "very poor," it was in fact using the term "safety net" -- over and over again. And then doubling down on his error, by promising to "fix the holes" in the safety net, if it "needs repair." This is where Mitt's playing ball on a Democratic field, and not just because it fits in so perfectly with the campaign Barack Obama is teeing up to run, either. Republicans, as a general rule, never speak of the "safety net" unless in seriously derisive terms. They prefer, instead, to speak of the "culture of dependence" or people who use "entitlements" (Marc A. Thiessen has a good example of this over at the Washington Post today, for reference, complete with reverent Ronald Reagan genuflections).

The weakness for Romney is that his statement -- ignoring the gaffe, and giving him all the context he wants us to consider -- is absolutely laughable, on the face of it. This is what comes from playing on the opposition's turf. Because Republicans today are all about "entitlement reform" -- which means, stripped of its own spin, "less money for the safety net." This basic disconnect cannot be reconciled with Romney's statement, no matter how much context we add. It is necessary to commit an act of doublethink to even try. Romney is for Paul Ryan's budget. The Ryan budget shrinks the safety net. So how, exactly, is Romney going to "fix" the safety net? How will making seniors pay an extra $6,000 a year for health insurance do that? How will cutting funds to Medicaid fix things? How is giving the ultra-wealthy (which you also say you're "not concerned with") another round of tax breaks going to fix the safety net, Mitt? Please explain, with figures and budget projections to back your claims up. Anytime you're ready....

These are the questions some intrepid reporter needs to ask Mitt Romney, and soon. Because talking about the "safety net" was Mitt's real "very poor" choice of words. You want to talk about the safety net, Mitt? OK, then let's talk about the safety net -- and your proposals to fix the holes in it. That would, indeed be a conversation worth having. And if the media doesn't ask Mitt, I'm sure Obama eventually will -- the first time they face each other in a debate.

 

Chris Weigant blogs at:
ChrisWeigant.com

Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant
Become a fan of Chris on The Huffington Post

 

 
 
 

Follow Chris Weigant on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChrisWeigant

I'm in this race because I care about Americans. I'm not concerned about the very poor -- we have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich -- they're ...
I'm in this race because I care about Americans. I'm not concerned about the very poor -- we have a safety net there. If it needs repair, I'll fix it. I'm not concerned about the very rich -- they're ...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 143
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
photo
Crisdean Wulver
"Deficits don't matter." --- Dick Cheney
11:01 PM on 02/07/2012
I guess this proves that Mormons have different beliefs than traditional Christians. Ananias and his wife Sapphira were struck dead because they didn't give all their money to the work of the early church of Jesus, whose work was HELPING THE POOR!

In Acts of the Apostles it says that after Jesus died, all his followers were consumed by the Holy Spirit, and that they then felt as one heart and soul, and that all their possessions became the possessions of all of Jesus' followers. Everything they owned was shared between them all. It was the duty of all new followers of Jesus to sell their possessions, including their land, and give everything to the church, which in those days meant the followers of Jesus. And one of the duties of the followers of Jesus was to TAKE CARE OF THE POOR!

But Ananias and his wife Sapphira held back some of the money they got from selling their property. And because they did this---and because it was considered a lie to the Holy Spirit and a sin against the Holy Spirit---they were STRUCK DEAD FOR NOT GIVING EVERYTHING TO GOD'S WORK, WHICH WAS HELPING THE POOR!

Check it out for yourself. Acts of the Apostles 4:31 through 5:12

Romney is preaching false Christianity. But so are the religious right if they think have no duty to help the poor.
anon004
With this moniker, you were expecting a picture?
08:53 PM on 02/08/2012
He wants them to rely on the government safety net, that, if elected. he is going to shred.
photo
rbenjamin
Rule 5 rules
10:30 PM on 02/07/2012
OMG. A Santorum tide is sweeping across the mid west tonight. Romney last seen clinging to to a barn torn from its foundations. His shirt still looked freshly pressed and every hair was in place. Uncanny.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Chris Weigant
www.ChrisWeigant.com
06:06 PM on 02/08/2012
rbenjamin -

OK, now THAT was funny!

:-)

-CW
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
04:52 PM on 02/07/2012
what the quote really shows is that mitt has zero understanding or empathy for what regular americans actually go through in their day-to-day lives. to him "fixing" the safety net is just an intellectual exercise, not a process by which living, breathing people can be helped or harmed.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
LizM
My micro-bio is too long for this space.
10:33 AM on 02/08/2012
It's acutally much worse than that. The quote, in its broader context, shows that Romney has no understanding about what caused the most destructive economic downturn since the Great Depression nor has he any viable prescriptions to energize the current economic recovery.

And, on top of all of that, the rest of his narrative is nothing more than a plethora of false and misleading statements with little or no factual basis.

This is an opinion ... based on the facts. :)
photo
Crisdean Wulver
"Deficits don't matter." --- Dick Cheney
06:06 PM on 02/08/2012
The homeless don't vote, so he doesn't give a dam about them.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:17 PM on 02/07/2012
Romney just has no game. He's like a freshman high school point guard trying to play in an NBA game...with predictable results. Dear neteru, even McCain wouldn't have been this flat-footed and he gave us Sarah Palin!
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
04:46 PM on 02/07/2012
but he does have a truckload of money. he can BUY game.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
05:34 PM on 02/07/2012
Not with that personality or his mouth. El Presidente can run right over him without breaking a sweat. Meg Whitman would be governor of Cali if you were actually right.
12:11 PM on 02/07/2012
Romney revealed his true self. A very dangerous man.
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
04:47 PM on 02/07/2012
i don't know about dangerous, but the guy is definitely out to lunch somewhere.
12:01 AM on 02/08/2012
Mr. Romney is so out to lunch that he does not understand the seriousness and gravity of the tragedy of being very poor in the most prosperous country in human existence, yet he wants to be Commander-in-Chief with the launch codes. Sounds dangerous to me...and scary!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cleverboots
08:58 PM on 02/07/2012
Ignorance paired with arrogance-always a dangerous combination
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
LizM
My micro-bio is too long for this space.
10:40 AM on 02/08/2012
Is it ignorance or is it intellectual dishonesty coupled with opportunism? Any way you slice it, though, he has the potential for creating a lot of danger ...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluepond
person
11:21 AM on 02/07/2012
The real revelation from this gaffe is that Romney doesn't seem to consider either the very poor, or the very rich, as "the heart of America", or as 'real' Americans. Some of the very rich belong to a global multi-national community with little national identity, and M. understands that. But I wonder where he thinks the very poor reside? Apparently, they aren't "us", but are instead some sort of pet chickens, to be fed, housed and kept in exchange for their minimum wage eggs.
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
04:53 PM on 02/07/2012
i don't think that's the case. he is aware they exist and are americans, he just doesn't get what their day-to-day lives are actually like.
photo
Crisdean Wulver
"Deficits don't matter." --- Dick Cheney
12:12 AM on 02/08/2012
It looks like we have a "gaffe machine" in Romney. He'd better start watching his words. John McCain and Joe Biden can be gaffe machines at times. And it's hurt both of them before when they were campaigning. If Romney has the same talent for putting his foot in his mouth, then he'd better start being more careful about talking off the cuff. His own mouth could turn into his worst enemy.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
LizM
My micro-bio is too long for this space.
10:46 AM on 02/08/2012
I'm going to let your false comparison with Joe Biden slide and just say that Romney's worst enemy is an informed electorate.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluepond
person
11:16 AM on 02/07/2012
Remember that a certain percentage of the population needs to be unemployed or very poor to hold down inflation. And that there needs to be a safety net to hold down the otherwise inevitable social unrest. Mitt just forgot to keep that info confined to quiet rooms.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:18 PM on 02/07/2012
To which I say (quoting the late, great Harry Morgan in an episode of MASH), "If you feel about this...GOOD!"
photo
Crisdean Wulver
"Deficits don't matter." --- Dick Cheney
12:14 AM on 02/08/2012
That's an economic myth, and a very unfortunate one. Not all economists buy into that myth. I suppose supply siders do, though.
photo
Fez
Ignorance is no excuse for the law.
10:53 AM on 02/07/2012
To paraphrase Firesign Theater, how can you be two places at once when you're nowhere at all? Romney is desperate and negative, two things Americans hate. He also has literally NO sense of humor and consequently he appears robotic and emotionally frozen. Try to imagine him on "The View" or a late night talk show. He doesn't do "small talk" and has so little compassion for others that he appears to be suffering from Aspberger's Syndrome. He has what it takes to run the Mormon Church but certainly not the US government.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:19 PM on 02/07/2012
Hey, it's an insult to Aspys that this Nowhere Man is even mentioned in the same breath. Romney is just outside of his natural habitat...the corporate boardroom. All the money in the world can't change that.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
10:43 AM on 02/07/2012
In 2004 I was astonished to overhear some older folks describing Kerry as an "elitist." Sure, compared to Faux Cornpone Bush he looked like someone that actually went to class at Yale, but that campaign was a duel between rich guys from patrician backgrounds, both of whom qualified as elites. In the end W had to smear the war hero and steal Ohio to win. Now the quintessential elite rich guy, MR-money, born with a silver foot in his mouth, his every scripted utterance displaying his disconnect with ordinary Americans. Not only is he indifferent to the "very poor," he has no understanding his distastefully predatory "business career." His dad made cars; Mitt made misery for working people and pocketed their money.

Nothing in his experience conveys a connection with the recent trajectory of the US economy. On script he's a medley of Republican distortions. Off script he is a Freudian extravaganza of unintended self-disclosure. As a lefty it's easy to read him. I can't imagine how the conservos will find comfort in his 25 years of multiple choice policies on every major issue. Whom do you trust? Will the real Mitt please stand up. Their only case is that he isn't that black guy in the White House, a strong argument with their crypto-racist base but wholly inadequate for the vast majority of voters.
11:00 AM on 02/07/2012
F&F
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:21 PM on 02/07/2012
Which brings us to another parallel from '04: hating the guy who is already there is worthless if the guy you want to replace him has no spark to him.
10:32 AM on 02/07/2012
It may be a gaffe or true indifference. But it could be a pronouncement from a man who is not very bright and who occasionally reveals his true self.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laurieanichols
je pense donc, je suis
10:12 AM on 02/07/2012
Romney's biggest problem is with himself, he wants to be all things to all voters so he tries to speak down to a section of the population that he hasn't any idea of what the core problems are that plague them. Middle class workers are frightened these days because we are now all highly aware that after years of income stagnation, we are one financial emergency from becoming poor. He slaps the poor in the face by saying that he isn't concerned with them but all his economic plans point to making them more miserable, no one wants to be poor. Plans such as linking minimum wage to inflation, making preschool and kindergarten available to every child, making public schools and public universities accessible to everyone, meaning safe and dependable. The issue is really about giving a helping hand outstretched to those to help lift them out of poverty, that is the issue. Anyone who is not wealthy is so vulnerable to fall down the economic and social ladder and the GOP is behaving like an ostrich with its head in the sand.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:22 PM on 02/07/2012
That is because they are out of human sacrifices to make their gods of money happy enough to let them look good. Why do you think that they turned the knives on each other?
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
05:00 PM on 02/07/2012
it's not just the Right, it's all big moneyed interests, left and right, and they're not quite out of sacrifices. that's what the education "reform" movement is about, getting as much money as possible out of public education and into their pockets.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jkanon
A pragmatic progressive
10:11 AM on 02/07/2012
Nearly half of this country depends on a government check in way or another to survive. Blaming half of the country for this or blaming the president for the mess he inherited is not the way to success. Republicans have to face reality or go down to defeat, despite, their tricks to make sure voters don't vote.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:24 PM on 02/07/2012
There is a critical flaw in that voter disenfranchicement scheme that they've been pushing that no one talks about: the fact that GOP voters are getting very fed up with their leaders promising but never delivering what they want. The Tea Party should have been a signpost of that discontent. That the mainstream GOP mismanaged the energy (grassroots or Astroturf though it may have been) is a warning sign that they have yet to account for.
photo
nypoet22
Psychology Ph.D., Civics Teacher, Songwriter
05:02 PM on 02/07/2012
no matter how many media people want to portray things differently, the tea party and occupy groups really do have the same underlying complaint, the government is run by moneyed interests, not by flesh and bone human beings.
10:07 AM on 02/07/2012
The only way Romney can "out-debate Obama" is to "NOT debate Obama". It needs to be stated that Romney, a man who supposedly is "a business guy", knows very little about "business". This is going to be a fun election!

Your servant,

Don Juan, the world's greatest businessman. I know "bidness"!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Craig2
Living in the great State of Jefferson
09:55 AM on 02/07/2012
Good morning, Rich Conservative Mitt Romney knows what he said. He admitted that he has said this before and not been attacked. Of course not. He was speaking to those who agree with him... Rich Conservative Oligarchs. American Oligarchs look at China and North Korea as models for Americas labor. There they don't care about the very poor, but the children. Oh, the children are future factory workers.
01:47 PM on 02/07/2012
They don't care about children, although they do care about fetuses. Once they are born, they are on their own.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bladesmith
Hammering out some red hot truth.
09:47 AM on 02/07/2012
Romney is toast. If he performs this badly agaisnt his own party, President Obama will beat him like a rented mule.
Jay Haney
My nuclear family imploded when I was 18. I've bee
12:24 PM on 02/07/2012
I actually get this image of a Gypsy woman pounding a tambourine myself...