Surely if you’ve been following the news of late, you’ve heard the conventional wisdom about the supposed “nastiness” of the campaign — driven mostly by Mitt Romney’s inflated rhetoric about “campaign of division and anger and hate” and references to Chicago, which last I checked, has voters in it.
What this is actually about is Democrats stating Republicans’ actual record and policy proposals, and Republicans calling that “hateful.” It’s about the real examination of the presidential tickets, not empty assumptions and proclamations about being Serious Policy Wonks™, proof to the contrary be damned. It’s about the President asking Republicans in Congress to actually allow government to function, rather than get caught up in the race to the nearest microphone to utter the latest condemnation of President Obama’s policies. Or something Vice President Joe Biden said.
We’re going to have a negative campaign. That’s something that may annoy Americans, but it’s something we all accept. But there’s a difference between running a negative campaign, and one that insults our intelligence.
Yesterday in his weekly address, the President called upon Congress to stop playing politics, and save a bunch of teachers from being laid off:
In his weekly address, Mr. Obama noted that education employment has fallen by 300,000 jobs since 2009. He pushed for Congress to help stem the job losses and called the Republican approach to education financing “backwards” and “wrong.”








