Mitt Romney has responded at length to the furor over his comments at a fundraiser about the 47 percent of Americans who pay no federal income tax and see themselves as “victims.” “My job is not to worry about those people,” Romney said in the video.
The comments were “not elegantly stated,” and were spoken “off the cuff,” Romney acknowledged Monday night in a hastily convened press availability with reporters. But he also doubled down on the outlook he espoused in the video, charging that “the president’s approach is attractive to people who are not paying taxes.”
The comments from the fundraiser were recorded surreptitiously, and obtained by David Corn of the liberal magazine Mother Jones. Corn appeared Monday night on Hardball and The Rachel Maddow Show, where he revealed further details about the video.
Here are Romney’s extended comments about the controversy tonight, footage of which was broadcast on The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell (you can watch them above):
I’m talking about the political process of drawing people into my campaign. Of course, individuals are going to take more responsibility for their life. My campaign is about helping people take responsibility, and becoming employed again, particularly those that done have work. This whole campaign is focused on getting people jobs again, putting people back to work. This is ultimately a question about direction for the country. Do you believe in a government-centered society, that provides more and more benefits? Or do you believe instead in a free enterprise society where people are able how to pursue their dreams? I believe the latter will help more people get good jobs. This is a campaign, fundamentally, about to help the middle class in America, and how to bring people out of poverty into the middle class. And we’ve seen the results of the last three, four years, and it has not worked. My approach will get 12 million new jobs and rising take-home pay.
Asked again about the comments, and whether he was giving a different message to funders than to ordinary voters, Romney replied:








