itt Romney reportedly asked Rick Scott, the Republican governor of Florida, to "tone down his statements heralding improvements in the state's economy," says Michael C. Bender at Bloomberg. Instead, the Romney campaign would reportedly prefer it if Scott said "the state's jobless rate could improve faster under a Romney presidency." Romney and Scott both deny that allegation, but it comes on the heels of numerous other reports indicating that GOP governors in battleground states — including Ohio, Virginia, Wisconsin, Iowa, and Michigan — are making life hard for Team Romney by touting their economic successes. After all, Romney's main campaign message is that President Obama has broken the economy and the nation needs a President Romney to fix it. Is Romney cheering for a bad economy?
Of course he is: "Romney clearly sees his only hope for election as lying in bad economic news," says Laura Clawson at Daily Kos. He hasn't laid out a clear plan for "what he'd actually do to improve things," and is instead banking on broad disgust with the economy to catapult him into office. But now that the economy is showing signs of slow improvement, he's resorted to "relying on Republicans to pretend good news isn't happening."
"Mitt Romney to Rick Scott: Hush up about Florida's dropping unemployment"
And clearly, GOP governors are a problem for Romney: The reported tension with Scott reflects a broader division between Romney and GOP governors, says Elizabeth Hewitt at Slate. "How can Republican governors campaign on their economic improvement record while Romney campaigns on the idea that Obama has made growth impossible?" Romney will try to argue that Republican governors made progress despite Obama's policies, but that's a tough message to sell.
"Romney camp said to ask Gov. Scott to downplay economic gains"
But in the end, it might not matter: The improving economy in battleground states certainly "puts Romney in a bind," says Jamelle Bouie at The American Prospect. If voters "hear a Republican governor and a Democratic president praise the economy — and see evidence of improvement — they might actually feel that the economy is doing well." However, most evidence suggests that "voters care more about the national economy, and as long as it's struggling, Romney is in good shape."
"Romney to governors, "Your optimism is not helping"
Read more political coverage at The Week's 2012 Election Center.
- Confessions of a trust-fund baby
- A linguistic dissection of 7 annoying teenage sounds
- 5 geniuses who denounced their work
- The politics behind Kanye West's 'New Slaves'
- The FBI kills Tamerlan Tsarnaev's friend: 4 things we know
- Why Portland refuses to fluoridate its drinking water
- 'The Choom Gang': 9 juiciest details from Barack Obama's days as a pothead
- How the White House's war on media backfired
- 10 things you need to know today: May 22, 2013
- Is the Xbox One the smart TV we've all been waiting for?
- The politics behind Kanye West's 'New Slaves'
- Are we on the cusp of a solar energy boom?
- Why Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn doesn't want tornado relief money
- WATCH: Jon Stewart hates everyone in Washington now
- LIVE UPDATES: Massive tornado tears through Oklahoma City area
- Angry at the government? 5 ways you can fight back
- 7 purported health benefits of drinking coffee
- What is a quantum computer — and why does Google need one?
- Why NASA is funding a 3D pizza printer
- The cool backstory of the Slurpee
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||













