When President Obama’s re-election campaign began criticizing Mitt Romney’s controversial private-sector background, the pushback was immediate. Republicans said it showed hostility towards capitalism; some high-profile Democrats balked; the many in the media predicted a public backlash.
The political establishment quickly formed a consensus: talking about Romney’s history of leveraged buyouts and mass layoffs simply wouldn’t work.
But there’s sometimes a gap between what Americans believe and what they’re told they’re supposed to believe, and this might be just such a development. ABC’s Amy Walters had an interesting report the other day:
“Bill Clinton and many in the chattering class may think that the attacks on Mitt Romney’s record at Bain are a flop, but a group of women swing voters at two focus groups I watched last night suggest that they are working. While these women in Las Vegas and Richmond, Virginia still don’t know much about Mitt Romney, a number of them volunteered that they were concerned about what they had heard about Romney’s record from TV.
Said Rebecca from Richmond, “the whole thing where factories have shut down — that concerns me.”
Well, that’s just a couple of focus groups. Maybe it was a fluke.









