GOP pounces on Obama remarks
WASHINGTON – Aware that the lagging economic recovery could dull President Barack Obama’s re-election chances, Democrats have taken solace in a potential trump card – a Republican challenger they have ceaselessly portrayed as out of touch, based as much on Mitt Romney’s verbal miscues as on his personal wealth and business record.
But, as the president sought to recover the upper hand after recent campaign setbacks, a rare rhetorical slip-up of his own Friday threatened to undermine his effort. In a White House news conference focused on the threat the worsening Eurozone crisis poses to the U.S. economy, Obama said Congress needed to act on his jobs plan to boost hiring in state and local governments. “The private sector is doing just fine,” he argued.
Obama’s remarks were part of a renewed attempt to use Republicans in Congress as a foil by accusing them of stifling job creation at home. Instead, he gave them an opportunity to pounce.
Almost immediately, the Romney campaign released a statement challenging the assertion. Within an hour, the Republican nominee himself offered a blistering response.
“Is he really that out of touch? I think he’s defining what it means to be detached and out of touch with the American people,” Romney told supporters in Iowa.
Obama’s assertion was a response to GOP claims that he was shifting blame for a weak economy to Europe and Congress when his policies were to blame.
He pointed out that job growth after the most recent recession has been stronger than it was after one earlier in the decade, but “the hole we have to fill is much deeper and the global aftershocks are much greater.”
“The truth of the matter is that, as I said, we’ve created 4.3 million jobs over the last 27 months, over 800,000 just this year alone,” Obama said before characterizing the private sector.
His larger point – that layoffs by state and local governments continued to be a weak spot as the private sector added jobs – is backed up by the data. The most recent jobs report found that while the economy overall added 69,000 jobs, the private sector alone added 82,000.