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  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    3:02pm, EDT

    Obama group maintains its mission is non-partisan

    By Ali Weinberg, producer, NBC News

    Organizing for Action, the issue advocacy-focused incarnation of President Obama’s successful campaign wing, is strictly non-partisan, the leaders of the new group said on Wednesday at a meeting of some of its members, volunteers, and donors.

    “We are not a partisan organization,” Jon Carson, the group’s director, told a gathering of roughly 70 participants at OFA’s Founder’s Summit, held in a ballroom at the St. Regis Hotel in Washington, D.C.

    “We are here to move this shared progressive agenda forward, and we will advocate to Democrats to move that forward. We will advocate to Republicans,” he said.

    OFA is registered as a 501c(4) nonprofit social welfare organization, able to accept unlimited contributions and not required by the Federal Election Commission to disclose its donors, although it will voluntarily do so for contributions over $250.

    The group, however, has been called out for accepting money from wealthy donors, even as Obama railed against the undue influence of big campaign contributors during his presidential campaigns.

    But OFA National Chairman Jim Messina, who served as Obama's 2012 campaign manager, asserted that the group will keep its message strictly policy-based, emphasizing gun safety, immigration reform, and climate change as three top issues.

    “There’s been some confusion about what OFA is and what it isn’t," Messina said. "I’d like to make sure that everyone is clear on that from the very beginning -- Organizing for Action is an issue-advocacy group, not an electoral one. “

    Volunteer Carlotta Joyner, who leads OFA’s Western Maryland chapter, said she had no concerns about the large checks the organization may get from some wealthy donors.

    “I trust the leaders of our organization when they say there’s no tit-for-tat -- if you give this amount of money you get to spend this amount of time with the president,” she said.

    “I don’t see it as constituting a way for this particular group of people to have undue influence on the president or the administration.” 
     
    Through Wednesday and Thursday, the summit will feature discussions on topics like the structure of the organization, how it will execute an “issues campaign” as well as policy-specific conversations.

    Among those leading the policy talks Thursday are outgoing EPA administrator Lisa Jackson, (who will discuss climate change) and Neera Tanden of the progressive think tank Center for American Progress (who will talk about gun safety).

    34 comments

    I don't agree with this or like it, but, Democrats can't drive 55 while the Republican'ts speed by us at 100 mph! Until there is some serious campaign finance reform, this will be the name of the game... The glaring difference is, OFA will disclose it's donors, while the right wing SuperPac's contin …

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    4:50pm, EST

    White House rolls out the cabinet members to warn of cuts

    Department of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano warns that the U.S. can't maintain the same level of security with sequester cuts – House Majority Leader Eric Cantor later dismissed her warning as rhetoric.

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    With less than five days to go before the so-called sequester forces across-the-board federal budget cuts, members of the president’s cabinet warned how cuts to their departments would affect Americans’ everyday lives.

    Monday’s distress signals from Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano came a day after two other cabinet leaders admonished Congress for some of the most high-profile consequences of the sequester, like cuts to education and air traffic control.

    Salazar warned that the department would not be able to hire the seasonal workers needed to maintain national parks through the peak summer tourism season, meaning some favorite destinations might be off-limits.

    “The public should be prepared for reduced hours and services not only in national parks but across all of the facilities which are managed by the Department of the Interior,” he said in a conference call with reporters. He added, “This will include reduced hours of operation for visitor centers, shorter seasons and closing of campgrounds, hiking trails and other recreational areas."

    Like Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood Friday, Napolitano appeared in the White House Briefing Room, where she responded to the question of whether the country would be "less safe after the sequester."

    Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood discusses how the looming spending cuts will affect air travel.

    "I don't think we can maintain the same level of security at all places around the country with sequester as without sequester," she said.

    She stressed that cuts to her department would mean longer airport delays. “If you're traveling by air, you're going to have to start getting to the airport earlier. And if you're trying to make a connecting flight, you're going to have to make your arrangements to give you greater time with which to do that."

    The former Arizona governor also warned of furloughed border protection officers, which would “affect our ability to keep out illegal migrants” and the government’s diminished ability to respond to national emergencies.

    “Threats from terrorism and the need to respond and recover from natural disasters do not diminish because of budget cuts,” she said.

    LaHood and Education Secretary Arne Duncan were dispatched to the Sunday talk shows to criticize Congress for the cuts scheduled to hit their departments.

    398 comments

    If the impacts of sequester have no serious and immediate consequences then why this … Republican Governors message for House Speaker John Boehner and other GOP leaders: It’s not OK to just sit on the sidelines. It’s time to do something to stop the automatic cuts, and fast.

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  • Updated
    19
    Feb
    2013
    4:25pm, EST

    Penny pinching: Can Obama manage elimination of one-cent coin?

    By Ali Weinberg, NBC News
    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    President Barack Obama finally broke his silence on an issue of national importance Friday – he thinks it’s time to retire the penny.

    The possible extinction of the one-cent coin was a featured economic question in a Google+ Hangout with the Commander in Chief last week as John Green, the co-creator of a popular YouTube channel, applied a little presidential peer pressure.

    “Australia, Canada, New Zealand, many other countries have gotten rid of their pennies,” Green said. “Why haven’t we done it?”

    “I gotta tell you, John, I don’t know,” Obama responded, adding, “Anytime we’re spending money on something people don’t actually use, that’s an example of things we should probably change.”

    RELATED: Conservative thinkers: GOP should cut 'stale' policies loose

    But why should anyone care? They’re pennies. Aren’t there more valuable things to worry about?

    First, pennies actually cost more to make than they’re worth. In 2012, every penny cost 2.41 cents to make – more than twice their face value.

    And as zinc and copper – materials used in minting the penny – have become costlier due, in part, to manufacturing shifts in China, which are likely to raise costs further.

    Granted, the total cost of minting pennies was only $58 million last year – less than one-tenth of a percent of total federal spending in 2012 – but groups like Citizens to Retire the U.S. Penny have long been making the economic case for getting rid of the penny (plus, the group adds, fishing for pennies adds about 2 seconds to each cash transaction per day).

    And the U.S. military has already decided they’re essentially useless; all Army and Air Force Exchange Service stores on bases round all cash purchases up or down to the nearest nickel.

    With both parties looking for ways to cut government spending, it seems as though cutting penny production could be a relatively painless, if insignificant, place to start. But in the Google+ Hangout, Obama ceded that Washington has bigger fiscal fish to fry.

    “The penny is an example of something that I need legislation for,” he said. “And, frankly, given all of the big issues that we have to deal with day-in/day-out, a lot of times it just doesn't -- you know, we're not able to get to it.”

    There have actually been efforts to pass penny-banning legislation. Back in 2001, then-Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-AZ) introduced the “Legal Tender Modernization Act,” which would have made pennies obsolete by requiring retailers to round up or down to the nearest nickel on cash purchases.

    That bill failed, and Kolbe’s second attempt in 2006, the “Currency Overhaul for an Industrious Nation (COIN) Act,” after zinc costs nearly doubled, met a similar fate.

    But the president doesn’t need Congress to explore other, cheaper alternatives to zinc – the main metal in pennies. In fact, the administration’s 2013 budget encourages the Treasury to “explore, analyze, and approve new, less-expensive metals for all circulating coins like aluminum, iron and lead.”

    It wouldn’t be the first time Abe Lincoln’s coin got a makeover. Back in 1982, the penny changed from 95 percent copper and 5 percent zinc to 97.5 percent zinc and 2.5 percent copper.

    (And lest so-called “penny hoarders” try to melt that valuable pre-1982 copper down, the Mint in 2006 prohibited the melting of pennies and nickels. It also made it a crime to carry more than $5 in one and five-cent coins out of the country).

    Changes to the composition of pennies do have Congressional champions: Ohio Rep. Steve Stivers (R) introduced the “Cents and Sensibility Act” in December 2011, which would mandate that pennies were out of American steel (much of which comes from the Buckeye State) and dipped in copper. 

    But these efforts will be met with some serious resistance from the zinc lobby (yes, there is one). The company Jarden Zinc, which creates “metal and zinc coinage,” according to its website, paid lobbyist Mark Weller $340,000 in 2012 to discuss issues related to “minting/money/gold standard” with members of Congress and the Mint, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

    Weller also represents the pro-penny group Americans for Common Cents, whose website warns of the risk of inflation that eliminating the penny would bring, and whose headquarters are on K Street, known for its many D.C. lobbyist offices. 

    “Americans for Common Cents aims to inform and educate policymakers, consumers, and the media about the penny’s economic, cultural, and historical significance,” the group’s website reads.

    The political power of the penny is likely another reason Obama hasn’t acted on getting rid of it. As far back as 2008, when he was still a candidate, the “penny lobby” appeared to mystify Obama.

    Asked about it at a town hall in Pennsylvania, he said, “We have been trying to eliminate the penny for quite some time -- it always comes back,” joking, “I need to find out who is lobbying to keep the penny.”

    This story was originally published on Tue Feb 19, 2013 2:51 PM EST

    1295 comments

    He'll replace the penny with an IOU in his image. Obama, Commodus whats the difference.

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  • 14
    Feb
    2013
    3:54pm, EST

    Obama hits Georgia to sell new childhood initiatives

    By Ali Weinberg, White House producer, NBC News

    DECATUR, Ga. -- Continuing his post-State of the Union tour, President Barack Obama today made an economic case for the early childhood initiatives he unveiled in his primetime speech, telling a crowd in this Atlanta suburb that investments in such programs are “a good bang for your educational buck.”

    The president’s education proposals include national universal pre-school enrollment and a new collaboration between the federal Early Head Start program, which is focused on the development of very young low-income children, and childcare facilities.

    And in his speech at a recreation center here, Obama singled out the nearby College Heights Early Childhood Learning Center, which he visited during his stop to the state, as an example of the types of state-federal partnerships that can boost the quality of life for low-income children well after preschool.

    “The kids we saw today, that I had a chance to spend time with -- they're some of the lucky ones, because fewer than three in 10 four-year-olds are enrolled in a high-quality preschool program.”

    Evan Vucci / AP

    President Barack Obama runs up the stairs as he arrives for a speech on education, Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013, at the Decatur Community Recreation Center in Decatur, Ga.

    The president said that such early investment in the future of children -- of all economic levels -- leads to a more vibrant economy overall. “That's not just going to make sure that they do well. That will strengthen our economy and our country for all of us,” he said.

    He praised Georgia, one of only five states to have an official goal of full preschool enrollment, in his State of the Union speech on Tuesday night, saying the state “make[s] it a priority to educate our youngest children.”

    But Georgia, which made a commitment to universal pre-K in 1995, still only has about 60 percent enrollment, and has had to cut back funding and school days because of budget shortfalls -- the program is funded by lottery revenues which have slowed recently.

    Twenty days of the pre-kindergarten year were removed this year due to budget cuts, which resulted in an exodus of qualified teachers. Now, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R) is proposing adding back 10 of those days according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Obama gave a nod to the state’s difficulty in funding the program, saying that “even in times of tight budgets,” Georgia and states like it have “worked to make a preschool slot available for nearly every parent who's looking for one for their child.”

    In terms of how the federal program would be funded, the Obama administration has not yet given specifics of how much its proposals would cost. The New Republic magazine speculated that the program might resemble one proposed by the liberal think tank Center for American Progress, whose preschool program costs $10 billion per year and Early Head Start-child care initiative would cost $10.5 billion per year.

    But the program will be revenue-neutral, deputy National Economic Council director Jason Furman maintained yesterday, because it will not cost as much as the administration’s spending cuts implemented last year.

    In addition to laying out his vision for America’s education future, President Obama also had a few words of advice for the parents of young children -- raising a few eyebrows as he seemed to suggest one of his daughters might have begun going on dates.

    “I do have to warn the parents who are here who still have young kids, they grow up to be, like, 5 [feet] 10 [inches]. And even if they're still nice to you, they -- they basically don't have a lot of time for you during the weekends. They have sleepovers and dates. So all that early investment just leaves them to go away,” he joked as the crowd laughed.

    169 comments

    Obama is right and even Newt Gingrich agrees. He endorsed early childhood on Tavis Smiley and few weeks ago, Newt and Arne Duncan have campaigned for it for years. This is bipartisanship and it's best.

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  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    2:07pm, EST

    Obama calls for at least short-term fix with cuts, revenue to avoid sequester

    By Ali Weinberg, White House producer, NBC News

    President Barack Obama said if congressional negotiators cannot draft a full budget by March 1, they should at least come up with a short-term combination of spending cuts and revenue increases in order to stave off deep federal spending cuts scheduled for that date.

    "If Congress can't act immediately on a bigger package, if they can't get a bigger package done by the time the sequester is scheduled to go into effect," Obama said, "then I believe that they should at least pass a smaller package of spending cuts and tax reforms that would delay the economically damaging effects of the sequester for a few more months until Congress finds a way to replace these cuts with a smarter solution."

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    President Barack Obama turns towards cameramen and reacts to a sound as he speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2013.

    The sequester, reached as part of 2011 budget negotiations, was never actually supposed to take effect. Rather, its deep cuts, including almost $500 billion in defense spending over nine years, were put in place as a trigger to get Congress to agree to more comprehensive budget and tax reform.

    House Speaker John Boehner released a written statement before Obama’s remarks, blaming the president for the sequester and saying he would not support any additional revenue increases.

    “President Obama first proposed the sequester and insisted it become law,” Boehner said, adding, “We believe there is a better way to reduce the deficit, but Americans do not support sacrificing real spending cuts for more tax hikes."

    In recent weeks, members of Congress appeared to be playing rhetorical chicken over the cuts, with some suggesting they were resigned to the across-the-board cuts.

    “I think it’s more likely to happen,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) was quoted as saying by the Washington Post last week.

    But the White House has stood firm on the self-imposed cuts, with White House Press Secretary Jay Carney underscoring Friday that the sequester was always intended to be replaced.

    “The negative consequences of implementation would be bad across the board," Carney said. "That's the point. So Congress needs to do its job."

    And the president hinted that revenues would remain central to all budget negotiations, telling CBS in a Sunday interview that “there is no doubt we need additional revenue coupled with smart spending reductions in order to bring down our deficit."

    747 comments

    I have no doubt the GOP will give us a fine austerity budget putting the economic recovery in full reverse, making the .1% contraction in Q4 2012 seem like the good old days.

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  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    11:43am, EST

    Obama cuts campaign-style video on raising taxes for top 2 percent

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    In a new 2-minute Web video, President Obama is reminding people of exactly what he campaigned for during the election: higher taxes on those making $250,000 or more a year.

    Watch on YouTube

    The clip is part of the Obama administration's social-media push to raise public support for his position of higher taxes on the top 2 percent of earners as "fiscal cliff" negotiations continue. It is one of the first times the post-election the Obama team has used actual footage from the campaign to show verbatim what he called for on the trail.   

    "President Obama campaigned on a clear tax plan,” graphics in the video's opening sequence read. Then, a flashback to Obama's speech on Sept. 9 in Florida: "Under my plan, first of all, 98 percent of folks who make less than $250,000, you wouldn't see your income taxes go up a single dime."

    Since he won re-election, Obama has highlighted what he believes was his victory in the court of public opinion on taxes, suggesting Republicans should accept the politically popular idea of raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans.

    “That's the kind of fair, balanced, responsible plan that I talked about during the campaign, and that's what the majority of Americans believe in,” Obama said in Hatfield, Pa., last Friday in a campaign-style trip to rouse public support for the White House’s position.

    1416 comments

    The community organizer is organizing the community, republicans have mocked him for that ever since the 2008 campaign season, however he is the one who handed them their heads in the last two elections.

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  • 30
    Nov
    2012
    12:12pm, EST

    White House 'surprised' by GOP 'surprise'

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    Republicans should not be surprised at the fiscal proposal they received from the White House last night, White House Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest said, as President Barack Obama has been highlighting the same position on the campaign trail for the past year.

    NBC's Mark Murray and Domenico Montanaro discuss a week that was largely a repeat of past weeks where the conversation continued to swirl around Susan Rice, the Fiscal Cliff and the post-mortem of the 2012 election.

    “I was surprised that they were surprised,” Earnest told reporters traveling on Air Force One for the president’s trip to Hatfield, Pa., where he’ll talk about his tax and budget priorities.

    Recommended: Obama proposal sends a message to Republicans

    Thursday night, Republicans called the White House’s proposal, submitted by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, “a complete break from reality,” citing the White House’s starting line of $1.6 trillion in additional revenue, which they say is twice as much as what was on the table in 2011.

    Earnest said figure reflects the goals of higher taxes on the wealthy that the president articulated on the campaign trail.

    “The marker that was presented in the context of the balanced approach deficit reduction the president advocated in the campaign was $1.6 trillion in tax revenue,” he said. 

    1034 comments

    Stick to your guns Mr. President, don't balk and don't waiver. Lets these repubs sink with their USS. Richie-Rich. They don't know any better and since they are un-willing and or un-able to change, they by the laws of nature, will become extinct. And just by looking at their record of old, these rep …

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  • 2
    Nov
    2012
    12:00pm, EDT

    Obama slams Romney for Jeep ad in Ohio

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg
    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    HILLIARD, Ohio -- At his first campaign event since the release of the final jobs report before Election Day, President Barack Obama reprised his auto-centric Ohio economic pitch, slamming Mitt Romney for what he said were deceptive ads claiming Jeep was moving its business overseas.

    He suggested that such a claim, debunked by both Chrysler executives and multiple fact-checkers, made workers here unnecessarily fearful for their jobs.

    President Obama continued his tour through Ohio with a campaign stop in Springfield, Oh., where he continued to criticize Governor Romney for running deceptive Jeep ads saying "This is not a game, these are people's jobs."

    “You've got folks who work at the Jeep plant who've been calling their employers, worried. Asking, is it true? Are our jobs being shipped to China? And the reason they're making these calls is because Governor Romney's been running an ad that says so,” Obama said, speaking to 2,800 supporters at the Franklin County Fairgrounds here.

    “Everybody knows it’s not true,” he continued. “The car companies themselves had told Gov. Romney to knock it off.”

    Recommended: Ryan lambastes jobs report: 'We are 9 million jobs short'

    He said Romney was trying to cause such controversy as a last-ditch attempt to gloss over his opposition to the auto bailout, to the detriment of workers here.

    “I understand that Gov. Romney's had a tough time here in Ohio because he was against saving the auto industry," Obama said, "and it's hard to run away from that position when you're on videotape saying the words ‘let Detroit go bankrupt.’”

    He concluded, “You don't scare hardworking Americans just to scare up some votes."

    This sort of populist appeal to auto- and other blue-collar workers has paid dividends for Obama in Rust Belt states like Ohio. He’s faring better among white working-class males in those states than he is with that group in the rest of the country.

    Obama spent less time here talking about the latest 7.9 percent unemployment figure, touting the fact that companies hired more workers in October than at any time in the past eight months but quickly moving on.

    He continued his tour through smaller Ohio towns, stopping next in Springfield, Ohio.

    471 comments

    This is what I don't get about Romney: EVERYONE democratic and republican alike KNOWS that that ad is a bald faced LIE. As in factually incorrect. Is he stupid or does he honestly just want to annoy people. Maybe he thinks voters are stupid? Sighs.

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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    10:16pm, EDT

    After eight states in 48 hours, even the president gets hoarse

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

     

    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    CLEVELAND, Ohio – Perhaps the most impactful part of President Barack Obama’s speech here Thursday night wasn’t anything he said, but how he arrived.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama greets supporters on the tarmac upon his arrival on Air Force One at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012.

    The presidential aircraft, Air Force One, taxied right up to a crowd of 12,000 at the Burke Lakefront Airport, easing to a stop in front of the podium.

    After a dramatic few minutes when the crowd cheered on the plane itself, the president descended, breaking into a full jog to the stage, the words “United States of America” emblazoned on the aircraft behind him, gleaming in stark white and blue against the darkness of the night behind it.


    While such theatrics were an example of the power of the presidency, Obama’s hoarse voice proved that even presidents get run down sometimes – for example, after 48 hours covering eight states and catching a few hours of sleep on the plane – even if it is Air Force One.

    “We’ve been going for two days straight, from the East Coast to the West Coast,” he told the crowd. “I’ve still got a spring in my step because our cause is right. Because we’re fighting for the future,” he continued.

    The president hit some notes that he reserves for Ohio events, including a special focus on the auto bailout, popular with Ohio’s autoworkers, which his presidential rival Mitt Romney opposed.

    “If Mitt Romney had been president when the auto industry was on the verge of collapse we might not have an American auto industry today,” Obama said. “The auto industry supports one in eight Ohio jobs. It’s a source of pride to this state. It’s a source of pride for generations of workers. I refused to walk away from those workers.”

    After his speech, the president turned and got right back on his plane, and took off for the White House.

    150 comments

    Get a good night sleep Mr. President. See you on the campaign trail tomorrow. BTW, whats up with Ryan going to Alabama, Georgia and by passing a town hall meeting that he had scheduled? guess they need to keep him in the red states so he cannot answer questions about the Murdock statement about God' …

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  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    6:16pm, EDT

    Obama urges Colorado voters to head to polls early

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    DENVER, Colo. – President Barack Obama is going to vote for someone tomorrow, but he won’t say for whom.

    Speaking to a crowd of 16,000 in a Denver park, the president sought to lead by example by saying he would vote early in Chicago on Thursday.

    “I can’t tell you who I’m voting for,” he said. “It’s a secret ballot. But Michelle says she voted for me.”


    “We can vote early in Illinois, just like you can vote early in Colorado,” the president continued, driving home the importance of early voting to the Obama campaign, which is relying heavily on getting people to the polls before Election Day.

    Earlier today senior White House adviser David Plouffe underscored the importance of early voting in swing states like Colorado, saying that through early vote figures, “you begin to make some assumptions about the electorate that’s going to materialize.”

    Slideshow: On the Trail

    To date, 37 percent of early Colorado voters are registered with the Democratic Party. Thirty-nine percent are registered with the Republican Party and 23 percent are registered with unaffiliated parties. (The rest are registered with other parties.)

    But because those unaffiliated voters do not have to pick a party, it is difficult to get a precise read on which presidential candidate is getting the most early votes.

    After the Denver event, the president headed to Los Angeles, Calif. to tape a segment for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Later Wednesday he was slated to attend a campaign rally in Las Vegas, Nev.

    443 comments

    Speaking to a crowd of 16,000 in a Denver park Obama/Biden 2012 - Let's go Colorado!!!

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  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    8:41pm, EDT

    Obama jokes about 'Romnesia' in car country

    By NBC's Ali Weinberg

    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    DAYTON, Ohio – Taking his campaign into car country, President Barack Obama touted his from-the-start support of the auto industry bailout, contrasting it with what he said was Mitt Romney’s shifting position on the issue.

    Highlighting what is a popular topic in this swing state, where one in eight jobs is tied to the auto industry, Obama joked that his Republican opponent had “Romnesia” in Monday night’s debate when he said he would have helped car companies avoid bankruptcy during the 2009 auto crisis.

    “If you said that you love American cars during a debate, you’re a car guy – but you wrote an op-ed titled, ‘Let Detroit Go Bankrupt’ – you definitely have a case of Romnesia,” Obama said as he spoke to a crowd of 9,500 at a public park here.


    Seeking to characterize his opponent as untrustworthy, Obama said, “Last night Gov. Romney looked you right in the eye, looked me in the eye, tried to pretend that he’d never said, ‘Let Detroit go bankrupt.’ Tried to pretend he meant the same thing I did when we intervened and worked to make sure management and workers got together to save the U.S. auto industry.”

    “Pretended like somehow I had taken his advice,” Obama said.

    But, he continued, “People don’t forget. The people of Dayton don’t forget. The people of Ohio don’t forget,” he said.

    The president returned to the White House after his Dayton event; he heads Wednesday to Davenport, Iowa where he kicks off another two days full of campaign events.

    880 comments

    Obama is right about something, "people don't forget"

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  • 17
    Oct
    2012
    9:18pm, EDT

    Obama: Romney 'running around talking like he's Mr. Coal'

     

    By NBC’s Ali Weinberg
    Follow @AliNBCNews

     

    Updated 10:07 a.m. - ATHENS, OH – Energized by a huge crowd and, likely, his improved debate performance against Mitt Romney Tuesday night, President Barack Obama went on an extended riff during remarks here about what he said was Romney’s inauthentic support for coal energy.

    Noting that Romney praised coal during the debate at Hofstra University, Obama pointed out that as governor of Massachusetts, Romney appeared in front of a coal factory to criticize its high level of toxic pollution, saying, “that plant kills people.”

    Obama said voters should be skeptical of Romney’s embrace of coal, mocking him as “running around talking like he’s Mr. Coal,” as a crowd of 14,000 at Ohio University cheered him on.


    “Does anybody ever actually look at that guy and think, man, he’s really into coal?” Obama asked the audience as he chuckled.

    Obama then brought up an ad, released earlier this week, that showed Romney speaking to workers at an Ohio coal mine, saying the workers in the ad were forced to attend the August Romney event – which the mining company and some of the workers have refuted.

    “Did you see when he was doing that ad, he was in front of all those guys – all these miners with hard hats. Find out later they had to come. Boss made them come. Come on, gotta be on the level if you want to be the president of the United States!” he exclaimed.

    The Romney campaign responded to the president's remarks in Athens by releasing a statement from spokeswoman Amanda Henneberg. "“As we approach Election Day, President Obama’s rhetoric and personal attacks will not mask a failed record that has left middle-class families hurting.  Under this President, permits for drilling on federal lands have declined, over one hundred coal-fired plants are schedule to close by the end of the year, and gas prices have more than doubled.  Mitt Romney has an all of the above energy strategy, which will create millions of jobs and put our nation on a course toward North American energy independence by 2020.”

    Obama returned to the White House on Wednesday night. He heads to New Hampshire Thursday before taping "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" in New York City.

     

    568 comments

    Nope. His backers are Mr. Coal----errrr Koch.

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    Explore related topics: energy, ohio, coal, mitt-romney, barack-obama, first-read, decision-2012, ali-weinberg
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