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Mitt Romney on Welfare & Poverty
Former Republican Governor (MA); presidential nominee-apparent
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I'm not concerned about very poor; they have safety net
Romney told CNN: "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 90-95% of Americans
who right now are struggling. You can focus on the very poor, that's not my focus," he said. Asked whether his words might strike some as odd, Romney said: "We will hear from the Democrat party the plight of the poor; we have a safety net to help
those that are very poor." Romney added that he's more worried about the unemployed, people living on Social Security and those struggling to send their kids to college.
Democrats and Republicans alike pounced and the GOP front-runner quickly sought to
explain his remarks. "No, no, no. You've got to take the whole sentence," said Romney, noting that his remark was consistent with his theme throughout the race, adding: "My energy is going to be devoted to helping middle-income people."
Source: Associated Press report, "Romney triggers backlash"
, Feb 1, 2012
My faith would inform my presidency
Kennedy's famous speech [on Catholicism in 1960] is actually quite different from the way it is often described. Instead of reconciling his religious identity with his role in public life, Kennedy entirely separated the two. In the 2008
Republican primary, Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney's Mormon faith was likewise perceived as an issue by some voters. Claiming that many would be reluctant to pull the lever for a person of his beliefs, some pundits and political advisors urged him
to "do a JFK." Just give a speech, they told him, and reassure voters that your faith will have nothing to do with your presidency. Instead, he gave a thoughtful speech that eloquently and correctly described the role of faith in American public life.
Unlike JFK, Romney declared that our religious liberty is "fundamental to America's greatness." And he spoke openly of "how my faith would inform my presidency, if elected."
Source: America by Heart, by Sarah Palin, p.184-185
, Nov 23, 2010
Entitlements: focus on future beyond next election
The entitlement liability can be rectified, and the first step is to create public awareness that pushes the issue to the front burner. That will require political leaders who believe that their next election is less important than their children's
future to speak out. It will also require able and relentless investigative voices in the media to refuse to let candidates off the hook who do not confront this issue.
Prior to the 2008 economic collapse, there was reason to be hopeful that these voices would emerge. But the turbulence and uncertainty surrounding the financial crisis may keep the entitlement emergency in the shadows, allowing politicians to
continue to ignore it for a while longer. Unfortunately, President Obama has done nothing in his first year in office to call attention to this looming crisis or to advance any solutions.
Source: No Apology, by Mitt Romney, p.156
, Mar 2, 2010
Opportunity is in our DNA; dependency is death to initiative
What is it about American culture that has led us to become the most powerful nation in the history of the world? We believe in hard work and education. We love opportunity: almost all of us are immigrants or descendants of immigrants who came here for
opportunity--opportunity is in our DNA. Americans love God, and those who don’t have faith, typically believe in something greater than themselves. The values and beliefs of the free American people are the source of our nation’s strength and they
always will be.The threat to our culture comes from within. The 1960’s welfare programs created a culture of poverty. Some think we won that battle when we reformed welfare, but the liberals haven’t given up.
At every turn, they try to substitute government largesse for individual responsibility. Dependency is death to initiative, risk-taking and opportunity. Dependency is a culture-killing drug. We have got to fight it like the poison it is.
Source: Speeches to 2008 Conservative Political Action Conference
, Feb 7, 2008
Creating jobs helps poorest workers; not cash handouts
Q: Democrats say your economic plan doesn’t give any money to the 50 million Americans who don’t pay taxes.A: Well, my system is primarily based on trying to create jobs, not handing out cash to individuals. I do lower the lowest income tax bracket
from 10% to 7.5%. And that helps people at the low economic level. But the heart of what I’m doing is trying to get businesses to become more active, buying capital equipment, trying to get businesses to grow in this country and to create more jobs.
Q: But what about those 50 million who don’t pay any taxes? Nothing for them?
A: Well, it’s focused on jobs. What you want to do is provide the incentives to help companies to be create new jobs. Obviously, the best antidote to having an economic
slowdown is growth in the business sector, creating jobs, and that generates more income for everybody. But for those that are not paying any taxes at all, simply writing a check doesn’t seem to me to be the right course to follow.
Source: 2008 Fox News interview: “Choosing the President” series
, Jan 20, 2008
Vetoed $220K for state-run homelessness projects
Budget Item 7004-3036 was reduced by the Governor from $1,221,925 to $1,000,000; the Governor disapproved $141,000 for Just-A-Start housing stabilization conflict management services, a program to prevent homelessness; and $80,925 for the
Central Massachusetts Housing Alliance. A vote of YES would override the Governor’s veto and fund the two programs.
Source: MassScorecard.org Bill H.4001; roll call 127 passed 143-8
, Jul 14, 2005
Vetoed studying how MA can overcome federal workfare rules
The governor vetoed the part of Budget Item 1599-4408 which authorized a study on potential state responses to federal welfare rule changes. The study would propose methods to maintain existing welfare coverage when federal changes reduced such coverage.
Source: MassScorecard.org item 1599-4408; roll call 93 passed 130-19
, Jul 14, 2005
Faith-based programs to provide social services
Governor Mitt Romney has created a special office to help faith-based groups in Massachusetts land more federal money, and he appointed his wife, Ann, to lead it. Romney endorsed faith-based programs yesterday as a means to provide social services and
said he wanted to step up the state's efforts to help religious groups and charities attract federal help.Critics of the faith-based effort warn that Romney's move bolsters President Bush's attempt to get more federal dollars to religious
organizations carrying out social services, a policy they say is eroding the traditional division between church and state. ''The Bush administration is trying to break down the church-state wall and give public money to the churches without the
legal safeguards that ought to be in place," said one critic.
Faith-based organizations apply directly for the federal grants, but Romney said the state can assist groups in the application process.
Source: By Frank Phillips, Boston Globe, "Faith-Based"
, Jun 29, 2005
Would require welfare recipients to work
Romney suggested three policy changes: requiring welfare recipients to go to work immediately; eliminating capital gains taxes for firms that invest in inner-city enterprise zones and awarding tax credits for hiring poor residents of those areas;
and imposing a crime crackdown with tough mandatory minimum sentences.
Source: Anthony Flint in Boston Globe
, Nov 1, 1994
Page last updated: Oct 22, 2012