Last week, Mitt Romney’s campaign unveiled its first television ad of the general election, a generally positive spot describing what the Republican would do on “day one” if elected. In his first 24 hours in the Oval Office, Romney would apparently approve an environmentally-risky oil pipeline, cut taxes on the wealthy, and take away health care access for millions of Americans.
Yesterday, the campaign unveiled its second ad, this one called, “Day One, Part Two.” Apparently, the Republican is sincere about hitting the ground running — he has quite a few ambitions for Jan. 21, 2013.
For those who can’t watch clips online, viewers learn that Romney — still on his first day in office — would also “announce deficit reductions,” “stand up to China on trade,” and “begin repealing” federal regulations, which the Republican believes are responsible for hurting the economy.
Voters who care about the truth won’t find much to like about this spot. Romney’s agenda doesn’t focus on deficit reduction; it would add trillions to the debt through tax cuts and increased defense spending (a problem that would be made worse if he kills the Affordable Care Act). If Romney pushes us into a trade war with China, we all lose. And the notion that regulations are hurting the economy is plainly false to anyone who knows what they’re talking about.
But the larger lesson here is that Romney, despite a breathtakingly-conservative vision, really doesn’t have much to offer in the way of practical, real-world solutions to any of the nation’s pressing economic problems.








