Does Mitt Romney have a problem with the truth?

How is #10 not a straight up lie? One of the hostages spoke at my school (and lived on my paper route) in the early 80’s. I’ve read an excellent book on the subject. Everything I’ve heard from people who were there, or have seriously looked into it, is that the hostage takers hated Carter and gave no thought at all to Reagan. Negotiations were about returning the Shah, and after his death, unfreezing of Iranian assets. Once the issues were settled, they delayed the release until after the inauguration as a final “fuck you” to Carter.

I’m sure lots of people would like to see it as corroboration of Reagan’s get-tough image, but that doesn’t mean it’s in any way true.

They don’t want to give the opposition or the media the chance to selectively quote it the way I just did. These days, even the subordinate clause has to be negative.

Steve Benen’s 10th edition of Chronicling Mitt’s Mendacity is out. I see that he calls it “Mendacity” rather than “Lie” or even “Untruthful”. Please accept that clarification to the OP.

Ample links and additional material are at Steve Benen’s blog entry.

This week isn’t as overwhelming as the top 6 from last week were. Here are my scores:
1,3, 9 - highly misleading

2, 6, - untruth

4 - dishonest and ironic

5 - who cares

7 - fantasy conflicting with all expert opinion

8 - highly misleading, but par for the course: Mitt has merely changed his position and is trying to paper that over. I see his problem: he can’t just say he changed his mind, because frankly he does that way to much for it to be a credible excuse. Then again, nobody has ever lost money under-estimating the gullibility of the Republican electorate.

10 - hyperbole, combined with baseless smear. Obama worked on Wall Street, was a professor of constitutional law at the University of Chicago and was a best selling author, all before his political career. And if Mitt doesn’t think that the Presidency is a job, he should pursue other work.

Hilariously, Benen notes that Mitt also attacked Santorum by saying, “misrepresenting the truth is not a good way” to boost one’s campaign, and candidates looking to gain ground should “use truth as one of the pillars of your strategy.” The Mittster seems to have discovered an inversion of the Rove strategy. Karl Rove advised candidates to identify the main strength of one’s opponent and attack that. Never mind accuracy or smear – just attack the main strength. Romney’s strategy is to ID one of his own many shortcomings and attack his opponent along those lines. So Romney projects his untruthfulness onto Santorum. And in #4 he attacks Obama for ending Medicare, when in fact the Medicare phase-out plan was proposed by Ryan (R). It’s a good approach when the media is prone to false equivalence. See? Both sides claim the other wants to end Medicare!

Sorry for the nitpick, but… “[He] told the public bold face he didn’t”? Am I the only one that found that construction cringe-worthy?

That was from the National Journal. To be fair, the Hill called it “Bald face”, which sounds more plausible: “He went out and misled voters that somehow or another he was not for mandates at the federal level when in fact he was,” Santorum said. “He went out and said, ‘Oh no. I didn’t require Catholic hospitals to provide things that were against their conscience,’ when in fact he did. He said, ‘Oh, I didn’t provide free abortions under ‘RomneyCare,’’ when in fact he did for some.”

“So he’s repeatedly had big government solutions and then gone out and told the public, bald face, that he didn’t do the things that he did,” Santorum added.

The former Pennsylvania senator cited recently unearthed materials — including “Meet the Press” appearances — in which Romney suggested that the Massachusetts healthcare law, specifically its individual mandate, would be a good model for national reform.

“Gov. Romney actually advocated for the Massachusetts model that President Obama adopted with mandates,” Santorum said. “And then went out on the campaign trail and repeatedly — well, he repeatedly didn’t tell the truth.” http://thehill.com/video/campaign/215341-santorum-romney-doesnt-tell-the-truth-on-healthcare

Not so strangely, Romney reminds me a lot of John Kerry. When you have to explain that you really do stand for something, people don’t think you really stand for anything.

Romney is basically the embodiment of all the phony caricatures the Republicans trot out during election years. Gore allegedly had a problem with the truth, though he didn’t. They wondered whether Kerry was the kind of guy you would have a beer with – but Romney is genuinely awkward, stilted or plastic in person, worse than Nixon. They spoke of limousine liberals and out of touch plutocrats – Romney fits these cultural descriptions to a T.

The New York Times quoted one Tony Libri, chairman of the Sangamon County Republican Central Committee, in central Illinois: “I’m tired of rich guys running for office because it’s a mountain to be climbed for them… He probably spends more on a shirt or a haircut than most Americans make in a week.”

Aside: are you saying “bold faced” and “bald faced” are the same thing? that clears some things up.

I’m hypothesizing there was either a typo or braino in the transcription presented by National Journal. I opine that “Bald faced” is more plausible. I did not watch Meet the Press.

I’ve always heard it pronounced like bold faced, spelled for some reason like bald faced. But they are the same thing.

The correct phrase is bald-faced. You do see/hear bold-faced sometimes. Either way, it sounds a little weird without the word “lie” immediately following.

Either way he pronounced it, I presume Santorum was hoping everyone would fill in the “lie” part without requiring him to actually say it. Outright saying that a candidate is lying is apparently a breach of campaign etiquette–probably because once it starts, it will get thrown back at the one who started it.

Yes, it’s called “being a fucking moron.”

Yes. Romney saying Bush and Paulson saved country from depression.

Love it. Lincoln, the first Republican president, rose to political prominence in Sangamon County, which included New Salem.

Well, that is actually fair. Of course Obama continued saving the country from Depression. What Romney is not going to say is that if the mainstream Republican policies were followed, we would be in a depression. The Republicans were the ones against the horrid bailout. And Bush and Paulson got us into the mess also.

And that’s what I was saying makes a lot more sense to me. It’s like when you read the AW-ree as a child, and didn’t realize it was the same word as a-RYE that other people said.

When I saw the “y’all” and “I ate some cheesy grits” nonsense from last week I was immediately reminded of John Kerry posing in a borrowed leather work jacket at some AFL-CIO event in 2004.