IS ATTACKING BAIN CAPITAL A POLICY ARGUMENTMOLLY BALLTHE ATLANTIC
[This], not policy, is what the attacks on Bain are really about: what kind of person Romney is. It’s about character — whether he feels the pain of average folks or is instead seen as callous and greedy. It’s yet another in the seemingly endless litany of depictions of Romney as an out-of-touch rich guy. Romney has tried to engage the Bain critique on this level, issuing a video featuring out-of-work Americans and telling more stories about regular people on the campaign trail. But he hasn’t done a very effective job fending off the Bain critique, and maybe this is why: The idea that he lacks empathy has become so deeply embedded it’s nearly impossible to shake.
FUN PLANS FOR SUMMER VACATIONGAIL COLLINSNEW YORK TIMES
John Boehner wants to restart the debt-limit debate. This is big news. … Mitt Romney made a major speech in which he laced into President Obama for adding “almost as much debt as all the prior presidents combined.” This is a much-repeated factoid whose shock value is matched only by its extreme inaccuracy. … It was a pretty dramatic speech, which compared the debt to a raging prairie fire. Romney said he would extinguish the blaze with his spending and tax-cutting plan, which the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated would, at the very best, do nothing whatsoever. Only 25 more weeks to go.
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BOEHNER REPEATING BAD HISTORYEDITORIALWASHINGTON POST
There was a point, we confess, when we too hoped that debt-limit brinkmanship might encourage responsible behavior. Then came last summer’s debacle. The country moved closer to the edge of default than anyone had thought imaginable. The U.S. credit rating was downgraded for the first time in history, and the resulting uncertainty and lack of confidence dragged down the economy. And for what? For no real progress. … The action-forcing event did not force the necessary action. … So it is appalling that Mr. Boehner would be willing to repeat this dangerous episode, this time at potentially even greater risk.
RAND PAUL’S CYNICAL BUDGETDANA MILBANKWASHINGTON POST
The tea party darling’s plan would, among other things, cut the average Social Security recipient’s benefits by nearly 40 percent, reduce defense spending by nearly $100 billion below a level the Pentagon calls “devastating,” and end the current Medicare program in two years. … Paul is evidently not eager to defend the plan. He showed up at a news conference on the budget Wednesday afternoon but then slipped out of the room before the questions began. But his remarks, two minutes long, may have set a Senate speed record for the rate of dishonest statements per second. “You know, much has been said about the need for compromise,” Paul told reporters, adding: “People say ‘compromise, compromise, be a moderate.’ Well, how do we do that if the other side has no plan and won’t talk to us?”








