Forget for a moment, the jellybean delegate count, or reactionary, media-driven notions of “momentum” in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. The new television ad above, which President Obama’s re-election campaign will release today, is the first of this election cycle to mention Mitt Romney by name. That’s a big of a signifier that this race is all but over as anything we’ve seen recently.
Tonight’s primaries in D.C., Maryland, and most notably, Wisconsin are likely to help boost Romney’s delegate lead and put him over the halfway-to-1,144 point. So, his foremost primary argument — math — is on his side. Now he has the President directing his fire at him. So this is a good thing for Romney, yes?
Not necessarily. The White House is targeting energy, a decidedly weak area of Romney’s policy platform. They’re also, like the DNC, now doing their best to remind America that he is BFFs with Congressman Paul Ryan, the author of a brand-new income inequality-exploding budget that House Republicans — yes, just them — passed last week. (Before that happened, Melissa broke down the new Ryan budget/”moral document” in “Go Figure.” See the segment at right.)
Today, President Obama will tie the knot aggressively in a speech at the Associated Press luncheon, one which may evoke the message he put forth in his widely-noted economic address in Osawatomie, Kansas late last year. On paper, one of the White House’ excerpts is brutal on Ryan’s plan, calling Ryan’s budget a “Trojan Horse,” “an attempt to impose a radical vision on our country,” and “thinly-veiled Social Darwinism.”
Greg Sargent of the Washington Post‘s Plum Line:








