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sailingaway
09-27-2012, 05:43 PM
1. Wall Street is giving up hope for a Romney win.

Wall Street executives have obviously been rooting for a Romney victory. However, “now many masters of the universe concede they may not get their man,” Politico reports .

Across Wall Street and the broader landscape of corporate America, even strong supporters of Romney acknowledge that swing state polling numbers and the direction of economic data and markets suggest it’s time to brace for a second Obama term.

Though money from Wall Street donors doesn't appear to be drying up for the Romney campaign, "the business community tend to follow data and play percentages. And right now they favor the president." That does not inspire confidence.

2. He keeps alienating poor voters, AKA “them.”

After the 47 percent debacle, you’d think Romney would step up his game in courting low- and middle-income voters. In his new campaign ad , he does try to woo those voters -- but he fails by reinforcing the notion that poor Americans are not like him. Garance Franke-Rute at The Atlantic on Romney’s “them” problem:

In the 47 percent video, it was "those people."

"I'll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives," Romney said.

But presidential elections are always about the grand national us. They are about we, the people. And when it come to a candidate, they are about me and you.

Garance Franke-Rute points out that instead of an "us" Romney makes poor and middle class voters a "them": "President Obama and I both care about poor and middle-class families. The difference is my policies will make things better for them."

3. Romney’s backed himself into a corner by saying good things about RomneyCare.

Romney’s presidential campaign has relied in large part on Romney denying and/or ignoring the similiarities between ObamaCare and the Massachusetts health care plan he pushed through as Governor. Well, the Republican candidate is starting to slip up on that front. As Salon’s Steve Kornacki reports, Romney has bragged about his RomneyCare legacy a few times of late, and it’s put him in a tight spot.

[W]hen Obama embraced RomneyCare and the GOP embraced reflexive opposition, it left Romney with nothing to say. The best he can do is occasionally invoke his main gubernatorial feat in interviews like he did with Allen and hope there’s not any immediate backlash from his base. And even if there isn’t, it just reinforces his plight, with the media covering not the content of his remarks but the oddity of it all.

4. He just keeps embarrassing himself.

Romney’s robot-like charisma can’t be winning him many votes. In this clip (hat-tip Raw Story ), Romney can’t get the whole name-chant thing down with the crowd at a recent campaign event. Even right-winger Joe Scarborough had to cover his eyes and cry, “Oh, sweet Jesus.” ...

5. He’s not backing down from some of his worst ideas.

As Sahil Kapur at TPM reports , Romney’s tax plan has few supporters, on the left or the right -- a Tax Policy Center study even said it was “not mathematically possible” – but that’s not stopping him from going full steam ahead. One of Romney’s spokespeople told TPM, “The governor’s plan calls for a 20% rate cut for all brackets, revenue neutrality, while ensuring that high-income earners continue to pay at least the same share of taxes. All of these goals are achievable, and the governor will work with Congress to enact tax reform that meets each of the goals he has proposed.”




more at link: http://www.alternet.org/election-2012/wall-st-loses-faith-their-man-romney-6-really-bad-new-signs-gop-candidate

phill4paul
09-27-2012, 05:45 PM
http://ts3.mm.bing.net/images/thumbnail.aspx?q=4683241654846678&id=88987b5b553998bd86a20f59c52cd1e3

Aratus
09-27-2012, 05:47 PM
Mitt has been dipping on InTrade,
BHO is climbing over 75 as Mitt is
going below 25 rather than both
hovering near 48 or 49 if we factor
in the 3rd parties. He may hold his
own in the debates, and we may
see Paul Ryan slamming Joe Biden
to the metaphoric mat in the veep
debate on the technicals. BHO's d.c
crowd think the election is in the bag.

Anti Federalist
09-27-2012, 06:52 PM
Actually, both of these asshats are bought and paid for by big business/big government.

Obama

University of California $703,781
Microsoft Corp $544,445
Google Inc $526,009
Harvard University $431,860
US Government $396,550
Deloitte LLP $369,401
DLA Piper $367,027
Stanford University $326,942
Sidley Austin LLP $312,278
Kaiser Permanente $303,163
Time Warner $295,030
Columbia University $264,588
Comcast Corp $261,274
University of Chicago $227,525
IBM Corp $218,761
Skadden, Arps et al $214,766
US Dept of State $213,256
Wells Fargo $202,216
National Amusements Inc $197,342
University of Michigan $190,862


Romney

Goldman Sachs $891,140
Bank of America $667,139
JPMorgan Chase & Co $662,719
Morgan Stanley $649,847
Credit Suisse Group $554,066
Citigroup Inc $418,263
Wells Fargo $412,250
Barclays $403,800
Kirkland & Ellis $393,667
Deloitte LLP $355,390
HIG Capital $338,000
PricewaterhouseCoopers $333,600
Blackstone Group $313,725
UBS AG $308,130
Elliott Management $281,175
Bain Capital $268,470
EMC Corp $252,250
General Electric $214,450
Ernst & Young $212,025
Sullivan & Cromwell $197,150

http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/contrib.php?id=N00000286

Sola_Fide
09-27-2012, 07:13 PM
Actually, both of these asshats are bought and paid for by big business/big government.

Obama

University of California $703,781
Microsoft Corp $544,445
Google Inc $526,009
Harvard University $431,860
US Government $396,550
Deloitte LLP $369,401
DLA Piper $367,027
Stanford University $326,942
Sidley Austin LLP $312,278
Kaiser Permanente $303,163
Time Warner $295,030
Columbia University $264,588
Comcast Corp $261,274
University of Chicago $227,525
IBM Corp $218,761
Skadden, Arps et al $214,766
US Dept of State $213,256
Wells Fargo $202,216
National Amusements Inc $197,342
University of Michigan $190,862


Romney

Goldman Sachs $891,140
Bank of America $667,139
JPMorgan Chase & Co $662,719
Morgan Stanley $649,847
Credit Suisse Group $554,066
Citigroup Inc $418,263
Wells Fargo $412,250
Barclays $403,800
Kirkland & Ellis $393,667
Deloitte LLP $355,390
HIG Capital $338,000
PricewaterhouseCoopers $333,600
Blackstone Group $313,725
UBS AG $308,130
Elliott Management $281,175
Bain Capital $268,470
EMC Corp $252,250
General Electric $214,450
Ernst & Young $212,025
Sullivan & Cromwell $197,150

http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/contrib.php?id=N00000286

Oh yeah. No matter what, the banksters always get their man.