Rush Limbaugh’s latest criticism of Mitt Romney is representative of a much larger problem plaguing the candidate: Romney’s trying desperately to pander to his party’s far-right, unhinged base, alienating everyone else in the process, but he’s still not connecting.
It was just last month when the former governor formally unveiled his campaign’s tax plan, which was an awful, Robin-Hood-in-reverse sort of scheme. It lavished generous tax breaks on the very wealthy, while actually raising taxes on the working poor, all while making Bush’s failed tax policies permanent.
The right was unimpressed, dismissing Romney’s proposals as “timid.” So, in a cringe-worthy display of cowardice, Romney threw out his month-old tax plan and replaced it with an even-more-conservative agenda. Maybe this would make the GOP base happy?
Apparently not. Romney, in unveiling his Tax Plan, Take Two, mentioned in passing he wants to make “sure the top 1% keeps paying, paying the current share they’re paying or more.” And this led to a stern condemnation from the de facto Republican leader, Rush Limbaugh.
“It accepts this ‘one percent/ ninety-nine percent’ premise that Obama has put forward in his class envy scheme,” Limbaugh thundered. “But apparently Romney’s advisers think that there is ground to be gained with the ninety-nine percent by portraying himself as being on their side and against the one percent,” he continued.
With crushing kindness, Limbaugh did concede that he could see some tactical advantage in Romney’s words. “In this climate with Occupy out there,” Limbaugh intoned, “he does want to avoid at all costs the allegation sticking that he’s a rich guy favoring the rich.”









