Obama: “This is not a distraction. This is what this campaign is going to be about.” That’s what the President said at the NATO press conference in Chicago in response to Mayor Cory A. Booker of Newark criticizing the Obama campaign going after Mitt Romney’s record at Bain Capital.
Romney: “**What this election is about **is the 23 million Americans who are still struggling to find work and the millions who have lost their homes and have fallen into poverty.” That’s what Mitt Romney said in response to the President. (Mitt Romney fails to mention that this happened before 2009.)
Right, if one candidate wins because he’s perceived as being better for the economy, that means the economy was the key issue. If he wins because he’s perceived as being better on national security, that means that national security was the key issue, etc.
Yes, economy all the way. Which is why Barack Obama, in his political genius, held the NATO summit in Chicago where he said, “This is not a distraction. This is what this campaign is going to be about.” That is something Mitt Romney could never do. Because Mitt Romney is not President, because Mitt Romney is not hosting a NATO summit in his home town (does he even have one?). Because only the President - Barack Obama - could frame the issue of the economy at a national security setting during an election year.
In other words, the President, at a national security setting, said what 2012 is going to be about.
If Republicans do not have an issue they will manufacture one. Some are beginning to grumble about the Rev. Jeremiah Wright again. Expect to hear about Bill Ayers, and the President’s presumed birth place in Kenya. Haters gotta hate.
What, you think the health-care realing means a non-social topic like health-care reform won’t be an issue in this election?! Rather the reverse, I should think.
It is not a social issue at all, in the sense that abortion and gay marriage are social issues. It is an economic issue, which is a broader topic than “fiscal” and includes it.
Those are solely social issues. Healthcare is both, because it involves two questions: (1) how do we spend less money, and (2), should we cover everyone?