AUGUSTA, Georgia — Mitt Romney and David Perdue probably had a lot to talk about before their joint rally on Wednesday.
The Georgia Republican Senate candidate’s political biography reads like a miniature history of Romney’s last presidential run. Perdue, a successful CEO at companies like Reebok and Dollar General, emerged from a tough conservative primary by running on a promise to apply his private sector know-how to fix President Obama’s alleged failings in Washington.
At a rally alongside Romney, Perdue attacked the president for encouraging voters to support his Democratic opponent, Michelle Nunn.
“The arrogance of this guy, coming into Georgia on our radio station in Atlanta and saying you got to elect Michelle Nunn because I need her in Washington to continue my policies to do good for America,” Perdue told a crowd of several dozen supporters, referring to a recent interview by the president. “Not on my watch.”
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Romney, in what felt like a throwback to his 2012 run, used his own comments to attack Hillary Clinton, whom he referred to as a “certain leading Democrat,” for saying “Don’t let anybody tell you that it’s corporations and businesses that create jobs” in a recent speech. The quote, which Clinton has since said was actually about tax breaks for businesses, had drawn comparisons to Obama’s “You didn’t build that” line, which Romney repeated endlessly on the presidential trail.
“I happen to know that businesses and corporations aren’t the only places that create jobs, I’m sure there a couple of other places somewhere, but in fact they do create jobs and David knows how to do that,” Romney said.
Just like Romney, however, Perdue has found that his business background cuts both ways.
In 2012 Obama seized on Romney’s work at Bain Capital to accuse his rival of turning a profit for investors at companies that eventually went bankrupt and investing in others that engaged in outsourcing. This year, Democratic opponent Michelle Nunn has hammered Perdue daily over outsourcing, bankruptcies and alleged misconduct at his former companies. Republicans credit those attacks with making the race competitive.
In an interview with msnbc, Perdue predicted the outsourcing claims wouldn’t resonate as strongly with voters in the Georgia race in part because they’d been tried already.
“That’s what they did against Romney,” Perdue said. “I think people are paying attention to it this time. They’ve had so much of it now they say ‘Wait a minute, I’ve seen this before.’”
Perdue said his response to the attacks was to “talk about the issues Georgians are concerned about: debt, the economy and jobs.”
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The 2012 parallels were clear enough that when Romney met with reporters after Wednesday’s rally, all but one of the questions were about Nunn’s outsourcing jabs.
“That kind of baloney gets thrown around towards the end of a campaign, whether it’s mine or it’s David’s, and I think the people of Georgia pretty much rejected it in 2012 when I was running,” Romney said. The Republican bested Obama by 53-45% in Georgia in 2012.
“I think they’re going to reject it again,” Romney said. “People understand enterprises, businesses of all kinds, they build and grow jobs.”
Still, some Georgia Republicans are starting to get the sense they’ve seen this movie before. National Democratic groups have even labeled Perdue “Romney lite” and “Georgia’s very own Mitt Romney” in press releases.
“It’s like (Nunn’s) running against Romney,” Maria Zack, who owns several small businesses, told msnbc at a Perdue rally in Gainesville. “Perdue has a great comprehension of what it takes to run a business and she’s a community organizer. We have one of those in the White House, how did that work out for us?”
Like Romney, Perdue has absorbed some intra-party criticism for his language around the issue. His initial response to the attacks, which like Romney’s were brought up by his Republican primary opponents first, was to defend some outsourcing decisions as necessary to rescue the company in question. The issue died down, but got new life last month after a 2005 deposition emerged in which Perdue said he spent “most of my career” working on outsourcing issues. The quote quickly made it into Nunn’s ads, along with Perdue’s initial response to the story.
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