The Washington Post ran a rather brutal story the other day on Mitt Romney’s controversial private-sector background, highlighting Bain Capital’s work as a “pioneer” in in “relocating jobs done by American workers to new facilities in low-wage countries like China and India.” The Romney camp pushed back, stressing the distinction between “outsourcing” jobs and “offshoring” jobs, but that really didn’t help.
While Team Romney is generally content to let controversies die from a lack of oxygen — remember when everyone was looking for Romney’s still elusive tax returns? — this Post article was the kind of revelation that’s likely to do real, lasting damage to the Republican campaign.
So, the campaign has decided to lean on the Post in a big way.
On Wednesday, six days after the story was published, Romney’s campaign is seeking a full retraction from the Post, Politico’s Dylan Byers reports. The campaign is meeting with Post executive editor Marcus Brauchli and other staffers, armed with “defenses for each firm mentioned in the Post’s article — including Chippac, Corporate Software, GT Bicycle, Modus Media, SMTC Corp., and Stream International — on a case by case basis,” Byers writes. The campaign will say the Post misinterpreted Securities and Exchange Commission filings, and did not take into account how foreign hires helped American businesses and exports, Byers notes.









