Mon, May 28, 2012, 9:10 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Does Romney's 'I'm Not Concerned About the Very Poor' Line Matter?

Romney's comment isn't a gaffe so much as an artless description of his tax policy. He's more concerned about cutting taxes for middle class investors than he is for keeping taxes low on the poorest Americans.

615 romney pointing florida.jpg

Reuters

After his impressive victory in the Florida GOP primary, Mitt Romney told CNN anchor Soledad O'Brien, "I'm not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there. If it needs a repair, I'll fix it."

He continued: "I'm not concerned about the very rich. I'm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90-95 percent of Americans who right now are struggling."

When O'Brien suggested that "lots of very poor Americans" would find that comment odd, he continued, "You can focus on the very poor, that's not my focus. The middle income Americans, they're the folks that are really struggling right now and they need someone that can help get this economy going for them." The CNN video of part of the interview is also embedded at the bottom of this post.

Democrats are squealing in delight that the fabulously rich GOP frontrunner has ostensibly admitted, eyes facing a live camera, that he doesn't care about the poor. The line is tailor-made to be taken out of context, but if you read closely, Romney is absolutely not saying he has no regard for the very poor. He's saying he believes that the safety net we have is sufficient to protect them.

There are probably plenty of people who agree with Romney. After all, the safety net has been a century-long project of the federal government, from Social Security to food stamps to 99-week unemployment benefits. Since the Great Recession assistance to the very poor has increased tremendously, preventing poverty from rising above 16%. As Jordan Weissmann reported for us, total safety-net spending -- which includes state and federal Medicaid, food stamps, unemployment benefits, and private assistance such as mortgage loan write-downs and credit card discharges -- grew by 50 percent between 2007 and 2010, from $10,000 per needy adult, to $15,000. In 2010, half of households took government benefits, the largest share in U.S. history.

http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/en_us/Finance/FIN_US_AHTTP_THEATLANTIC/Does_Romney's_'I'm_Not_Concerned-b38178022489a65d61383e53f563238d


So, Romney's right. The social safety net does a lot. But does it do enough? 

To begin to answer that question, it's worth pointing out that today's social safety net isn't tomorrow's social safety net. The 99-week unemployment benefits will end as employment grows, and they should. Expanded income security measures will fall away as we whittle down domestic spending under the Budget Control Act of 2011 (the debt ceiling deal) and other laws. Republicans want to pare it back even further with cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and domestic spending.

This is what austerity does. It forces us to make tough choices about who wins and who loses. Mitt Romney has made his choice. His tax plan is basically today's tax policy with more support for businesses and investors, and less for the poor. First, he makes investment income tax free for the middle class. Second, he cuts corporate income taxes. Third, he repeals the estate tax. And fourth, he does not extend the tax cuts created by the 2009 stimulus bill, which Obama has proposed keeping. Romney's tax proposal would "raise taxes for households in the bottom two quintiles, relative to what they're paying this year," wrote Roberton Williams of the Tax Policy Center, even as it cuts taxes for middle class investors.

In light of this, Romney's comment isn't a gaffe so much as an artless description of his tax policy. He's more concerned about cutting taxes for middle class investors and businesses than he is for keeping tax rates low for lower-income Americans. You and I might have different ideas about whether that's the right direction for our tax policy. But I hope we can agree that this isn't the kind of thing you want advertised with gaffes about "not being concerned" about the very poor.

***

Whenever I write about tax policy, I'm asked how I would address our ridiculous tax code. The short answer is that I would lower the rates, shave the tax expenditures, and raise revenue, starting at the top. My chief beef with Romney is that he's not interested in more revenue, but he also thinks 2011 taxes are too low for millions of lower-income families.





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  • peacenick  •  3 months ago
    This is the typical offering from Republicans, good to see the old wolf come out every now and then for the edification of the voting populace. Mr Romney, every American should be your concern.
    • Fred Mertz 3 months ago
      Just like Obama, right? Right...
  • Robert  •  Moscow, Idaho  •  3 months ago
    It should matter to a hellova lot of voters.
  • Eugene  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 months ago
    The very poor (some in my family) are either; old, sick, addicted, made monster bad choices, undereducated or clueless. They have enough government support (average over $8,000/year) to eat, watch their TV's, have enough clothes and some spending money. They either can't or don't want to work because they can't make much more than they are given by taxpayers after the government workers take their cut. There is nothing that can be done for them that will make a big difference in their life-style without breaking the bank. Work the problem for the clued in, not the clueless
    • MK23 3 months ago
      I only give s shyt about the first two - old or sick - the rest............
    • Eugene 3 months ago
      MK23, I assume you mean you would do something about or for them. Like what? You can't make the 'old' younger, and the 'sick' already have access to health care, even without health insurance. Neither they nor illegals can be refused health care. I know I have experience in the art.
    • John 3 months ago
      There are people both rich and non working that scam the system. Most of the homeless are ex vets. Many hard working people are one illness from loosing the dynity they worked for. You may be next.
  • AndyAD  •  3 months ago
    So, look like some one want back into same old, but bigger balloon.
    What's will be crashing after that?- could be only all home.
    "Does Romney's 'I'm Not Concerned About the Very Poor' Line Matter".
    This words also is nothing less and nothing more- just same, but bigger
    mess.
    Poor' Line people are also voters, with good memory- Obama, hop is
    100% better.
    • AndyAD 3 months ago
      Sorry for typo, hope 100% is better- sound better even is only hope.
  • Will  •  Morton Grove, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Get used to this MSM nonsense for the next 9 months. Romney was basically saying he's not worried about problems addressing poverty, because expanding the safety net is always an option. What he is worried about instead is a more complex structural issue related to the middle class--the class that drives the economy and needs to be employed to get the economy moving again. That's a more difficult, immediate problem to solve, and that's where he feels his focus should be. Agree or disagree, but report it accurately.

    Don't expect a simpleton, gimme-gimme OWSer or a Soledad to understand this. And even if they do, don't expect honesty in their evaluation of his statements.
    • CrnaLegia 3 months ago
      All fine, but you miss the point: He constantly opens himself up for being taken out of context with statements that are killer statements when being taken out of context. In other words, he lacks political talent, he indeed is The Empty Suit.
    • Will 3 months ago
      Ah, yes, now I see. It is the person who lacks "political talent" who is, in fact, the "empty suit." Now I realize it the person with a slick PR firm and a good teleprompter who deserves the presidency. It's all in the words, I guess. So it's really the suit that matters, not what's in it.

      Silly me, I thought it was people of substance and ethics, with good ideas that were actually the ones who deserved to hold office. But those fools don't have the gift of the silver tongue--they get tripped up in their words, and they must be dismissed out of hand. Thanks for the clarification.

      You are a sad statement about the direction this country his heading. All about celebrity-appeal, positive TV exposure, and political savvy, instead of the things that matter.
    • CrnaLegia 3 months ago
      You still dont get it: He proves to have a low IQ by repeating the same mistake on an on. This prevents him to get into office in the first place, as good as he might be. I personally do not think he is any good, because there are other signs of lower intelligence. But again, that is not the point either.
      You cannot think abstractly, also a sign of a lower IQ.
  • aurw  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Only if you choose to take things out of context and use them for political purposes.
    • CrnaLegia 3 months ago
      That is exactly what political opponents do, especially in a stupid society like the US.
    • Andy 3 months ago
      That's why things will continue to get worse and worse. Look at the comments on this article alone. Everyone is out for blood and just wants to "trap" the other side. No one is interested in contributing to a solution. Or no one has the brain power to actually improve things.
    • LloydO 3 months ago
      He said there is a safety net for poor people. He also said he supports the evil Ryan plan which will decimate the safety net and give more money to the rich. Morons.
  • Ready Now  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
    I was so poor once I had to clean toilets and buss tables. I even had to be a fruit picker once, a construction clean up guy, a tree planter, a car wash dude, a dishwasher, a cook, a grass cutter, a snow shoveler, a gas station attendant, a QC guy, a salaried QC guy, a QC Mgr., an Eng. Mgr., a Plant Mgr., a VP of Operations, a multi-business owner who employed hundreds. That Tenn. HS diploma has served me well.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Greensboro, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    If you are mentally or physically handicapped society should care for these folks. BUT, if you are able body person and not working then I’m sick of all the free hand-outs to these folks. Life is choices, and if you made bad choices then live with them. I’m sick of hearing about the so called poor. All they do is sit around and watching Oprah and ESPN, they are able to work and won’t. You reward bad behavior and you get more of it.
    They already get free medical care, free food, free housing and even free cell phones.
    The middle class has paid for their free stuff long enough. Enough is enough, go get a job.
  • wys  •  3 months ago
    it is the righteous christian thing that the poor and their children must die following no abortion families get bigger, prices go up, wages go down, unemployment goes up but white jesus will tell you that slowly killing americans is plain fun while the cash flow goes to the 1% crowd, like adison the casino owner which is a #$%$ business is able to purchase goody, goody republican candidates. or the koch brothers who stole oil from the native americans and really paid no price at all for their crimes. it is only correct that the mormon church ... the church of the familiy has a half mexican national candidate that really wishes death to americans, mitt romney made his fortune destroying american jobs and exporting them to china. where is mitt romney's birth certificate? the prices that kids graduating from high school and trying to start their own life is not even close to the reality of what they might earn if they can even get a job. with the army getting rid of 80,000 soldiers they will come home to nothing. due to the republican party policy for the last 25 years ...there is nothing here unless you can steal like gingerich is so good at.
  • Procyon  •  3 months ago
    "Not my concern" = "Not my focus" = "Not my priority". When a particular group is the focus and the priority, others groups are not. Are not by definition. Virtually every candidate drones on about the "hard-working middle class", which is both (1) ) about to "disappear", and, (2) practically all of us. It takes no political courage to stake out that territory. Romney's formulation adds nothing to this. Except a weird sort of half-candor: He's explicitly naming two groups who are not his concern. People believe him. Sort of. They believe he'll demonstrate in practical ways that the poor are not his concern, but that his professed lack of concern for the rich won't be demonstrated. Which is consistent with Republican dogma: Those in the middle need jobs. Those at the top create jobs. Therefore, concern for those in the middle entails concern for those at the top.
  • R.Way  •  Oregon City, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    Still flogging this dead pony? Yahoo! How biased can you possibly get? You've been at this over two weeks now; this isn't "news", just partisan politics by The Press!
  • Thomas'n'the .mtn ...  •  3 months ago
    Romney thinks that only 4% to 9% of our citizens are poor, and that the social safety net takes care of them, and he wants to raise their taxes! He paid lobbyists to get the tax code "fixed" to make all his income taxable at the 15% rate, and then tells us he pays his taxes "and not a penny more!" He is totally out of touch with the realities of modern life in America, former home of the now-defunct "American Dream"--
  • Matt S  •  Salt Lake City, Utah  •  3 months ago
    It is a fact that democrats love poor people... why they have managed to double the number of poor in the last 3 years!
  • CyNical  •  Portland, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    It matters only if you're a magazine (or other media) hurting for subject matter, that is willing to look at flubs and out of context comments to find it.
  • Johnny  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 months ago
    You people are all very cold hearted. If you're a father of a family with a mortgage and get laid off because your company sent the work to India try surviving on unemployment benefits. The job market sucks. Its almost impossible to get a job because companies will tell you you're overqualified for the position or they say you will quit when the economy gets better. Our politicians need to stop rubbing peoples noses in the fact they give out unemployment benefits. Those same people were paying taxes and lots of it when they had jobs and now how can you rub their noses in the fact that that the taxes they paid from their paychecks are helping them while they find another job.
  • Janet O  •  Santa Barbara, California  •  3 months ago
    People always tell you who they are. He told everyone he's not concerned about the rich or the poor. I'm sure that day he was only talking to the middle class, go figure.
  • LorraineM  •  3 months ago
    John: Liberals and War? You had better talk to Newt then. He has all be declared war on Iran and last I checked his isn't liberal. In fact, he is so like Margaret Thatcher I think we should study her actions so can probably anticipate what the results will be. It would nice to have a forward thinking person who could visualize the needs of the future (a Steve Jobs kind of guy, only with a heart and caring of the country and its people) and not be tied to philosophies and ideologies of the past! I don't think either party has a visionary of that caliber. It is too bad we used up our share visionaries with the Founding Fathers.
  • Tom  •  Burlington, Vermont  •  3 months ago
    What does Mr. Romney know about poverty, malnutrition, or desperation to support a family on minimal wage? Or the cost of a college education or health insurance?

    Zero.

    We know. He claims he is unemployed. He only earns 21 million dollars a year on dividends and capital gains. Poor little fellow.
  • GodBlessAmerica  •  3 months ago
    Romney is right, the poor have welfare and other social programs, the rich have a lot of money and we don't have to worry about them The main concern should be the middle class. The heart and soul of this country. He said nothing wrong except the liberals want to spin what he meant into something bad.
  • James  •  Stamford, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
    I get what he said, and agree - but he really needs to be more careful how he says things.
 
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