TAMPA, Fla. — Seizing the campaign spotlight, vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan embraced “the calling of my generation” to help lead the country in tough times Wednesday night and pledged to cheering Republican National Convention delegates and a prime time TV audience that Mitt Romney will make the bold and difficult decisions needed to repair the nation’s economy.
“After four years of getting the runaround, America needs a turnaround, and the man for the job is Governor Mitt Romney,” the 42-year-old Wisconsin lawmaker declared in what amounted to a national debut. He spoke at a convention dogged by Tropical Storm Isaac, downgraded from a hurricane but still inflicting misery on millions along the nearby northern Gulf Coast.
“We will not duck the tough issues; we will lead,” Ryan said.
His speech was part attack on Obama, part spirited testimonial to Romney, all leavened by a loving tribute to Ryan’s own mother, seated across the hall in a VIP box. “To this day, my mom is a role model,” he said while she beamed and exchanged smiles with one of his children and delegates cheered.
As for Obama and the Democrats, he said they ‘have run out of ideas. Their moment came and went. Fear and division is all they’ve got left.”
To the cheers of the delegates, he pledged Republicans would save Medicare from looming bankruptcy, despite constant accusations from Democrats that the GOP approach would shred the program that provides health care to more than 30 million seniors.
“Our nation needs this debate. We want this debate. We will win this debate,” Ryan declared. But he offered no details of the remedy Republicans would propose.
Romney, in a secondary role if only for a moment, accused Obama of backing “reckless defense cuts” amounting to $1 trillion. Addressing the American Legion in Indianapolis, he said, ‘There are plenty of places to cut in a federal budget that now totals over $3 trillion. But defense is not one of them.”
In Tampa, the Romney team scripted an economy-and-veterans-themed program and kept a wary eye on Isaac. The storm remained a threat to levees in the New Orleans area almost exactly seven years after the calamitous Hurricane Katrina.
Inside the convention hall, delegates cheered a parade of party leaders past, present and — possibly — future.
The presidents Bush, George H.W., elected in 1988, and his son, George W., winner in 2000 and 2004, were featured in an evocative video. Arizona Sen. John McCain, the party’s 2008 nominee, spoke on his 76th birthday and said he wished he’d been there under different circumstances. And an array of ambitious younger elected officials preceded Ryan to the podium, Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and John Thune of South Dakota among them.
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice praised the Republican ticket in a speech that made no overt mention of Obama. “Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan will rebuild us at home and inspire us to lead abroad. They will provide an answer to the question, ‘Where does America stand?’”
Ryan said in excerpts released in advance that he was accepting “the calling of my generation to give our children the America that was given to us.”
He added, “The present administration has made its choices. And Mitt Romney and I have made ours: Before the math and the momentum overwhelm us all, we are going to solve this nation’s economic problems.
“And I’m going to level with you: We don’t have much time.”
As he spoke a pair of electronic boards tallied the nation’s growing national debt, approaching $16 trillion overall and more than $5 billion since the convention opened.
Ryan’s vice presidential acceptance speech marked a prime-time national debut by a relatively young lawmaker lauded by fellow Republicans for his understanding of the complexities of the nation’s budget.
Romney tapped Ryan this month as his running mate, a selection that cheered conservatives who have doubted the presidential candidate’s own commitment to their cause.
If Ryan’s selection was designed in part to appeal to conservatives, the convention was scripted to strengthen the ticket’s appeals among women, Hispanics and others who prefer Obama over the Republicans, as well as veterans who supported McCain in 2008.
Romney delivers his own nationally televised acceptance speech Thursday night in the final act of his own convention. The political attention then shifts to the Democrats, who open their own convention on Tuesday to nominate Obama and Vice President Joe Biden for a second term.
Deep into a two-week stretch of national gatherings, the race for the White House is in a sort of political black hole where the day-to-day polls matter little if at all as voters sort through their impressions.
Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on television commercials by the candidates, their parties and supporting groups, the race has appeared unusually close since Romney clinched his nomination last spring.
Only eight or so battleground states appear to be competitive, although Republicans say they hope to expand the campaign after Labor Day, particularly in industrial states struggling to recover from the worst economic recession since the Great Depression.
As chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan is the architect of a plan to curb long-term deficits by reducing taxes and making deep cuts in accounts ranging from farm programs to education. He also advocates saving billions from remaking Medicare and Medicaid, the government’s health care programs for seniors and the poor.
The Medicare changes, in particular, are potentially incendiary in an election campaign. Democrats say that Romney, with his selection of Ryan, has accepted political ownership of a plan that would turn the program from one in which seniors’ medical bills are automatically paid into one in which the government would give them checks to purchase coverage at costs that would require them to dip deeper into their pockets.
For all of the attack ads and inflammatory rhetoric, the two campaigns tiptoed carefully around the storm ravaging the Gulf Coast, vying to demonstrate concern for the victims without looking like they were seeking political gain.
Obama told an audience in Virginia he had spoken on the phone with governors and mayors of the affected states and cities while aboard Air Force One earlier in the day. Romney’s aides let it be known he might visit the region once the storm had passed.
Romney’s reference to $1 trillion in defense cuts was a 10-year figure that combined reductions already enacted by Congress and reductions scheduled to begin next January as a result of Congress’ failure to reach agreement on a broad plan to cut deficits.
He did not say so in his speech, but most Republicans, including Ryan, voted for the first installment as well as the second.
And another convention speaker, Sen. Paul of Kentucky, pointedly disagreed with Romney on defense spending.
“Republicans must acknowledge that not every dollar spent on the military is necessary or well-spent, and Democrats must admit that domestic welfare and entitlements must be reformed,” he said.
Romney’s reference to 9/11 was glancing in a speech that accused Obama of unwise defense cuts. Romney noted the economy is the top issue in the race, but he said, “Our debates can change suddenly, with a ringing phone in the dead of night … or a plume of smoke on a clear blue morning.
“The first job of government is to keep the American people safe,” he said, pledging to do so.
Democrats spent part of their time working to tarnish the Republican brand. They pointed to an ABC News report that said Romney’s campaign had held a reception in Tampa Tuesday night aboard a yacht flying the flag of the Cayman Islands.
Romney has been criticized for having investments there by Democrats who say the effect is to reduce his taxes.
In an appearance before University of Virginia students, Obama said he understood Republicans didn’t have much nice to say about his tenure in office. He told his listeners the GOP hoped to disparage him so much that they would either vote for Romney or sit out the election.
Romney had already returned to Florida aboard his chartered jet when Senate Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky began the convention’s daily battering of Obama.
“America is suffering through an economic calamity of truly historic dimensions,” he said in excerpts released in advance of his convention appearance.
“Some are calling it the slowest recovery in our nation’s entire 236-year history. To call this a recovery is an insult to recoveries.” He spoke a few hours after the government reported economic growth for the second quarter was 1.7 percent, sluggish but marginally better than earlier estimated.
Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Indianapolis, Julie Pace in Charlottesville, Va., Jim Kuhnhenn in Washington and Philip Elliott, Beth Fouhy and Tamara Lush in Tampa contributed to this story.



All the “tough issues” will spell the end of the middle class including some born again republicans. Romney can’t wait to pull the rug out from underneath the less forunate and give it to the one percent. Classic move from the top buzzard of the venture capitalist group.
We see what the republicans do to their own party, do you trust them
“I am not somebody who promotes same-sex marriage,” President Obama. Remember he denounced Prop. 8 in CA. Quickly, as your President needed ca$h and votes, he flew to L.A. and declared “Pro-Gay Marriage” (whatever that is).
“We have known for decades that our survival depends on finding new sources of energy. Yet we import more oil today than ever before,” Obama.Truth: Oil imports peaked in 2005 at just over 5 billion barrels, and have been declining slightly since. The figure in 2007 was 4.9 billion barrels, or about 58 percent of total consumption. The nation is on pace this year to import 4.7 billion barrels, and government projections are for imports to hold steady or decrease a bit over the next two decades.“I will not sign a plan that adds one dime to our deficits — either now or in the future.”
(Remarks by President Obama to a Joint Session of Congress, September 9, 2009)As Ryan said this evening, “It must be really difficult being in your twenties, living in the same bedroom you grew-up in, looking at the “faded” 2008 Obama poster and wondering when life begins…”You Liberal Hacks are done. Nice try, but it is time for the grown-ups to take over.
The next time you “grown-ups” are “appointed” control of anything, when you give the wagon back, first extinguish the flames, put the wheels back on and pull it out of the ditch, before going back to watching “The fountainhead”
lol… metaphorically speaking, we’re going to have to extinguish the fire on America by the current president. the so called wagon in the ditch that Bush “left” us is not even comparable to the economy and everything this country was founded on being in the ditch and burried 6′ down.
Lol …. “Metamorphicly” speaking the Republicans have progressed so far right the ditch has become a cliff. Watch out for that first step because the sudden stop at the bottom is going to be a killah.
From a metaphorical stand point though the genetically mutant Right will most likely have more in common with a flounder with eyes on the same side or their head due to rapid evolution and that sudden stop.
That was a great speech by Ryan ….. to bad it was all lies and BS.
You must be a very frustrated Liberal Marxist watching your President go down in the history books as the worst President in United States History. Jimmy Carter must be very thankful. Just for some “end-of-summer” President “Barry Socialist” Obama light-reading, I have provided “True Lies” and “True B.S.” of your Socialist President. Just curious, which part of Ryan’s speech was “all lies and BS?” You Liberal Hack!OBAMA: “We began by passing a Recovery Act that has already saved or created over 150,000 jobs.” — from news conference. THE FACTS: This assertion is flawed on several levels. For starters, the U.S. has lost more than 1.2 million jobs since Obama took office, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Even if Obama’s stimulus bill saved or created as many jobs as he says, that number is dwarfed by the number of recent job losses. OBAMA: “Number one, we inherited a $1.3 trillion deficit. … That wasn’t me. Number two, there is almost uniform consensus among economists that in the middle of the biggest crisis, financial crisis, since the Great Depression, we had to take extraordinary steps. So you’ve got a lot of Republican economists who agree that we had to do a stimulus package and we had to do something about the banks. Those are one-time charges, and they’re big, and they’ll make our deficits go up over the next two years.” — in Missouri. THE FACTS: Congress, under Democratic control in 2007 and 2008, controlled the purse strings that led to the deficit Obama inherited. A Republican president, George W. Bush, had a role, too: He signed the legislation. Obama supported the emergency bailout package in Bush’s final months — a package Democratic leaders wanted to make bigger. To be sure, Obama opposed the Iraq war, a drain on federal coffers for six years before he became president. But with one major exception, he voted in support of Iraq war spending. The economy has worsened under Obama, though from forces surely in play before he became president, and he can credibly claim to have inherited a grim situation. Still, his response to the crisis goes well beyond “one-time charges.” He’s persuaded Congress to expand children’s health insurance, education spending, health information technology and more. He’s moving ahead on a variety of big-ticket items on health care, the environment, energy and transportation that, if achieved, will be more enduring than bank bailouts and aid for homeowners. The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated his policy proposals would add a net $428 billion to the deficit over four years, even accounting for his spending reduction goals. Now, the deficit is nearly quadrupling to $1.75 trillion.
I stopped reading your rant before the end of the first sentence realizing the Rightwing nuts are indeed “extremely” nuts, but then … I knew that before I started reading it.
This is the guy who as a congressman brazenly opposed the stimulus program then wrote letters begging for millions in stimulus funds for his constituents and then openly lied saying he hadn’t… until he got caught . “Joe from Stoughton (Mass.)” helped nail him. His shiftiness and willingness to lie will fit right in with Willard’s campaign .
Ryan’s legislative track record is not gonna hold up under any type of close look-see and even he knows it. That’s why he’s out making all of these speech’s that are nothing but a bunch of fluff that can’t hold water. Once the actual record of Ryan’s votes comes out, he can forget any type of support from his supposed hard core GOP type’s who are so opposed to Gov’t assistance and support. His vote on TARP alone is a laugh given that he’s using it as a campaign point yet he voted for it since a huge amount of Wisconsin TARP money went to his District. The real SNL Follies have begun !
You just remember, if you are not driving a Caddy, have not got at least a million in savings, these two hucksters eyes would not even focus on you.
I know. Biden and Obama are a couple of “hucksters,” but the problem with these two “hucksters” is their Socialist Failed “Hope and Change” reform will lower my chances of earning a million-dollar savings account. A Caddy? Not my style, but today there were several “luxury SUV’s” with “Obama/Biden” and “Hope and Change” propoganda.
Strong attempt with the social class division, but old dog with MUCH older trick!
In just six (6) very short weeks, Ryan and current V.P. Joe Biden will square off in a debate, and if I were a Liberal Socialist I would be very concerned because the Obama/Biden “Hope and Change” Marxist foundation of government is over. Remember, for all of the socialist that posted comments about hating Ryan’s speech. Of course, the speech involved being blessed with independent thinking, opportunity for work, making personal decisions and not being ruled by a central government. Everything all Marxist are opposed. So the information below is an excerpt from a highly-recognized Liberal source and the author is building a 5 point case why Obama will not be re-elected and I just wanted to provide the Liberal-Hipster’s of self-entitlement reason number 1:
1. Overpromising on the economic recoveryHow many times have we heard the president say the downturn of 2007–09 was the “worst since the Great Depression”? Here’s the rub: Given that it took Franklin Roosevelt 10 years and a world war to fix the Depression, why on earth would Obama compare our downturn to FDR’s — but promise to fix it in a fraction of the time? Consider this February 2009 statement to NBC’s Matt Lauer: “If I don’t have this done in three years, then there’s gonna be a one-term proposition.” And why, given the “worst downturn since the Depression,” would the administration estimate that unemployment would only hit around 8 percent? The projection, made in a January 9, 2009, report called “The Job Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan” (written by former economic advisors Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein) also forecast that the president’s stimulus plan would create between 3 and 4 million jobs by the end of 2010. Fast forward just nine months, to October 2009, and the jobless rate hit 10 percent. (It has since fallen to 8.5 percent.) As for job creation, the administration was off as well. It has created 3 million jobs, but it took until the end of 2011 to get there. Because the president overpromised and under-delivered on the economic recovery, he may be right about that one-term proposition.
The V.P. debate should be “one-for-the-ages.”
If the Dems. are Marxist the clowns on the right are for sure Fascists.
The debate should be called Joe Biden vs. the mental midget of extreme.
You should study up on fascism. The Chick Fil A incidents exposed the truth about modern liberalism: it is nothing more than classic fascism.
So libs are Socialist, Marxist and Fascists ? ….. that would make your crowd “Extremely nuts”
You better study-up boy and act like you know something.
Nice response, I guess you should add “racist” to that list. Seriously, do you not understand any of the terms you just listed?
Thank you, seriously. Understanding anything in Right wing world first requires turning logic and the meaning of terms inside out and upside down, “gnihton dnatsrednu I sey os”
The right wing could and does say the same thing about the left wing. We should all thank Barry for this class warfare.
So that justifies you doing the same things, or whatever you think that as the left wing extremist do , only more extremely, collectively, organized from the top down,
and with no compromise , ever? .
How do the cons expect to win when their bottom line is “really, we are not much worse than those who we think are ruining American.”
ROTFFLOL
Whoa. The boycott is a time-honored means of social protest. If someone does not like the politics of the CEO of a company, they have every right not to spend their hard-earned money there. Just as the opposite side can choose to give them more of their business. Engaging in a boycott is not Fascism, either classic or neo. Telling us we have to spend our money there or we are un-American is an example of Fascism.
Ryan wants to make the Bush tax cuts permanent, spend more on “Defense” and shrink the deficit. This is, of course, impossible.
Check out the graph in this WP article to see it in simple terms.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/08/28/republican-national-convention-the-one-graph-you-need-to-see-before-watching/
Check out that graph if you want to see it in fake terms. Ezra Klein fails, like most liberals, to understand that tax cuts are not expenditures. Tax cuts cannot be responsible for debt. Ever a 3rd grader can understand that. Plus, not even the liberals support increasing taxes on everyone to cover the massive increase in spending. They think they can fool the public into believing taxing the rich will solve the problem.
When liberals finally learn the FACT that the Bush tax cuts INCREASED REVENUE to the federal government, maybe they will stop trying to reduce the revenue by increasing taxes. The problem is spending.
LOL, that’s not a fact, that’s a lie.
LOL… it is not a lie, it is a fact.
It’s a lie. Calling a lie a fact doesn’t suddenly make it true.
Tax revenue: FY2001 19.5% of GDP. 16.1% in FY2004. 18.5% in FY2007. FY 2009 at 14.9% – its lowest level since 1950 (14.4%).
Ryan made me proud to be an American once again. I can’t wait to compare that speech to Joe Biden’s – if the Dems actually let him speak at their convention.
I thought McCain’s speech was in keeping with Right wing wishes, he insinuated we should be in no less than five wars ……
The GOP has gone “all in” in the Far Right Hold’em game, and all they have are a couple of douches.
Just vague empty promises and baseless lies, that’s all they have. It’s pathetic.
you should hear what Barry has to say; he makes the Republicans look like a piece of gold sitting next to a crumpled up piece of aluminum foil.
When will he quit ducking the question and release his tax returns?!
LOL
http://www.technewsdaily.com/4423-6-companies-control-90-percent-media.html
the fact that ryan has not been directly on some of his most overt and fact-checked lies might have something to do with the fact that six corporations control 90% of all media. (tv, radio & print media)