| |
Romney:
Nearly
half
'believe
they are
victims'
By KASIE
HUNT and
STEVE
PEOPLES
|
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
-
Already
scrambling
to
steady a
struggling
campaign,
Republican
Mitt
Romney
confronted
a new
headache
Monday
after a
video
surfaced
showing
him
telling
wealthy
donors
that
almost
half of
all
Americans
"believe
they are
victims"
entitled
to
extensive
government
support.
He added
that as
a
candidate
for the
White
House,
"my job
is not
to worry
about
those
people."
President
Barack
Obama's
campaign
quickly
seized
on the
video,
obtained
by the
magazine
Mother
Jones
and made
public
on a day
that
Romney's
campaign
conceded
it
needed a
change
in
campaign
strategy
to gain
momentum
in the
presidential
race.
"There
are 47
percent
of the
people
who will
vote for
the
president
no
matter
what,"
Romney
is shown
saying
in a
video
posted
online
by the
magazine.
"There
are 47
percent
who are
with
him, who
are
dependent
upon
government,
who
believe
that
they are
victims,
who
believe
that
government
has a
responsibility
to care
for
them,
who
believe
that
they are
entitled
to
health
care, to
food, to
housing,
to you
name
it."
"Forty-seven
percent
of
Americans
pay no
income
tax,"
Romney
said.
Romney
said his
role "is
not to
worry
about
those
people.
I'll
never
convince
them
they
should
take
personal
responsibility
and care
for
their
lives."
Romney's
campaign
did not
dispute
the
authenticity
of the
video,
instead
releasing
a
statement
seeking
to
clarify
his
remarks.
"Mitt
Romney
wants to
help all
Americans
struggling
in the
Obama
economy,"
spokeswoman
Gail
Gitcho
said.
"He is
concerned
about
the
growing
number
of
people
who are
dependent
on the
federal
government."
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.
Obama's
campaign
called
the
video
"shocking"
"It's
hard to
serve as
president
for all
Americans
when
you've
disdainfully
written
off half
the
nation,"
Obama
campaign
manager
Jim
Messina
said in
a
statement.
An Obama
adviser
said the
Democratic
campaign
might
use
Romney's
comments
from the
fundraising
video in
television
advertisements.
The
official
wasn't
authorized
to
discuss
campaign
strategy
publicly
and
requested
anonymity.
Romney's
2010
federal
tax
returns
show he
paid a
tax rate
of about
15
percent
on an
annual
income
of $21
million.
The vast
majority
of his
income
came
from
investments,
which
are
taxed at
a lower
rate
than
wages.
His
wealth
has been
estimated
as high
as $250
million.
Democrats
have
tried to
make an
issue of
what
Romney
pays in
taxes
and what
he is
willing
to
divulge
about
his
taxes
and
investments.
While he
has
released
his 2010
tax
returns
and a
summary
of his
2011
returns,
he has
rejected
calls
for
releasing
as many
as 10
years of
tax
returns.
His
campaign
has
pledged
to
release
his
complete
2011
returns
before
the
election
Nov. 6.
The
private
remarks
are the
latest
in a
string
of
comments
from the
multimillionaire
Republican
businessman
whom
Democrats
have
criticized
as out
of
touch.
During
the
primary
campaign,
Romney
insisted
that he
was "not
concerned"
about
the very
poor,
said he
knew
what it
felt
like to
worry
about
being
"pink-slipped,"
and said
that his
wife
drove a
"couple
of
Cadillacs."
Aides to
Obama's
campaign
said the
latest
video
would
help
them
continue
to make
the case
that
Romney
doesn't
understand
the
concerns
of
average
Americans.
Voters
say they
believe
Obama
has a
better
understanding
of their
problems
and
concerns
than
Romney
does. A
CBS/New
York
Times
poll
showed
60
percent
of
likely
voters
said
Obama
understands
the
needs
and
problems
of
people
like
them,
while 37
percent
said he
did not.
For
Romney,
the same
question
found
that 46
percent
felt he
did
understand
people's
needs,
48
percent
said he
didn't.
The
remarks
came at
a
closed-door
fundraiser
that
Mother
Jones
reported
occurred
after
Romney
had
clinched
the GOP
nomination.
To
protect
the
identity
of the
person
who
provided
the
remarks,
Mother
Jones
blurred
out the
video
and did
not
provide
the date
or
location
of the
fundraiser.
Romney
formally
clinched
the
nomination
May 29
and
formally
accepted
it last
month at
the
Republican
convention
in
Tampa.
Many of
the
Americans
who owe
no
income
tax are
reprieved
because
basic
exemptions
— such
as the
"standard
deduction"
— took
their
taxable
income
below
the
cutoff
levels.
The
other
half
rely
mainly
on a
variety
of tax
breaks,
such as
the
credit
that
helps
offset
child
care
costs.
These
Americans
range
from the
very
poor to
solidly
middle-class
families
with
jobs,
homes,
cars and
vacations.
The Tax
Policy
Center
says
"relatively
few
nontaxable
households"
have
incomes
exceeding
$100,000;
families
that
make
between
$50,000
and
$100,000
often
owe no
income
tax
because
of
breaks
for
their
kids and
for
education.
Americans
who pay
no
federal
income
tax
still
often
pay an
array of
other
taxes.
They
include
payroll
taxes
for
Social
Security
and
Medicare,
sales
taxes,
property
taxes
and
state
and
local
taxes.
A
handful
of
extremely
wealthy
families
do not
pay
federal
income
taxes.
This
summer
the
Internal
Revenue
Service
reported
that six
of the
400
highest-earning
households
in
America
owed no
federal
income
tax in
2009.
Still,
many are
low-income
Americans.
According
to the
August
2010 AP-GfK
poll, a
majority
of
Americans
who make
less
than
$30,000
a year
are
Democrats.
But 27
percent
identify
as
Republicans,
and 15
percent
say
they're
independents.
About 57
percent
say they
will
vote for
Obama,
while 38
percent
back
Romney.
About 43
percent
identify
themselves
as
conservatives.
Obama
faced a
similar
moment
in the
2008
campaign,
when he
told
donors
that
many
Americans
who are
angry
about
their
struggles
"cling
to their
guns or
religion."
Romney's
running
mate,
Wisconsin
Rep.
Paul
Ryan,
made
reference
to that
remark
Monday
at a
campaign
event in
Des
Moines,
Iowa.
"I
remember
that one
time
when he
was
talking
to a
bunch of
donors
in San
Francisco
and he
said
people
like us,
people
from the
Midwest
like to
cling to
their
guns and
religion,"
Ryan
said.
Ryan
went on:
"And
I've got
to tell
you this
Catholic
deer
hunter
is
guilty
as
charged
and
proud to
say so.
That's
just
weird.
Who says
things
like
that?
That's
just
strange."
__
Associated
Press
deputy
polling
director
Jennifer
Agiesta
in
Washington
and
Associated
Press
writers
Ken
Thomas
in Los
Angeles,
David
Pitt in
Des
Moines,
Iowa,
and
Charles
Babington,
Philip
Elliott
and
Julie
Pace in
Washington
contributed
to this
report. |