Back in December, Mitt Romney delivered one of several “major” speeches on economic policy, telling a New Hampshire audience that in President Obama’s vision, “everyone receives the same or similar rewards, regardless of education, effort, and willingness to take risk.” The Republican added, “Obama believes that government should create equal outcomes.”
This was, of course, wildly at odds with reality. As Jon Chait noted at the time, “This is nuts, Glenn Beck-level insane. Restoring Clinton-era taxes is not a plan to equalize outcomes, or even close. It’s not even a plan to stop rising inequality. Obama’s America will continue to be the most unequal society in the advanced world — only slightly less so.”
I mention this because Romney gave yet another “major” economic speech in St. Louis yesterday, and he once again argued that the Democratic president is somehow hostile towards capitalism.
“Today, government at all levels consumes 37 percent of the total economy or G.D.P. If Obamacare is allowed to stand, government will reach half of the American economy. And through the increasing controls government has imposed on industries like energy, financial services and automobiles, it will soon effectively control the majority of our economic activity.
“One must ask whether we will still be a free enterprise nation and whether we will still have economic freedom. America is on the cusp of having a government-run economy. President Obama is transforming America into something very different than the land of the free and the land of opportunity.”
First, it’s important that Americans realize that Romney is lying. Reading from his trusted teleprompter — these weren’t off-the-cuff remarks, where it’s easier to make a mistake — the Republican nominee seriously argued that government will soon control most of the economy.
This is garbage, and Romney almost certainly knows it. David Corn recently scrutinized the claim and concluded it’s the former governor’s “biggest fib,” which falls “somewhere between ‘ridiculous’ and ‘stupid.’”
Second, the larger argument Romney is making marks the point at which the candidate transitions from conservative to hysterical.
It’s obviously fair game for Romney to attack the president, his ideas, his agenda, and his record. That’s what campaigns are for. Challengers tell voters that the incumbent is wrong and offer an alternative.








