As Mitt Romney struggles to put a cascade of missteps behind him, the Republican presidential nominee faces a twofold challenge: first, to steer the conversation back to the economy, and second, to prevent his recent difficulties from curdling into a perception that the race is becoming unwinnable.
Republicans, although anxious, point out that polls show their nominee remains within striking distance of President Barack Obama and that seven weeks remain before Election Day.
But Romney’s stumbles, if they continue, could jeopardize his party’s prospects farther down the ballot. Already, the GOP is facing a steeper climb in its efforts to retake the Senate and the prospect of losing seats in the House.
The latest controversy — over a leaked video in which Romney disparaged nearly half the country as Obama-supporting, government-dependent slackers — is at a minimum preventing his campaign from presenting a clear set of proposals for fixing the economy that it hoped would close the deal with the electorate.
“The challenge to the Romney campaign is how do you make the number one issue the number one issue,” said David Winston, a pollster who advises the congressional Republican leadership. “Any day there are other things going on that do not allow them to make the number one issue the number one issue is not a good day for the campaign.”
The controversy has also afforded the Obama campaign an opening to reinforce its argument that Romney’s main interest is looking out for the wealthy, not the middle class.
“My expectation is that if you want to be president, you have to work for everyone, not just for some,” Obama said during a taping Tuesday of “The Late Show With David Letterman.”
But Obama also noted that presidential candidates slip up on the campaign trail. He expressed regret over an episode in 2008, in which a recording device caught Obama telling wealthy donors in San Francisco that some small-town Americans become bitter and “cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.”
For Romney, the time and opportunities that remain to right things are short and few.
“The danger date for Romney is October 4, the day after the first and most important debate,” said one veteran GOP operative, speaking on the condition of anonymity to talk candidly about Romney’s prospects. “And he needs to keep an eye on Capitol Hill, because members of Congress are always the first rats off the ship.”
Thus far, the phalanx of Republican forces — the party machinery, outside super PACs and grass-roots interest groups — remains in tight formation behind Romney.
But if it reaches the point where his campaign appears so damaged that it threatens the prospects of other Republicans on the ballot, that unity could be shattered. In late October 1996, for instance, the party publicly abandoned its efforts on behalf of nominee Robert J. Dole and began appealing to voters to elect Republicans to Congress as a counterweight to an inevitable second term for Bill Clinton.
Republicans began this election cycle with what appeared to be ample opportunity to regain a Senate majority. That would require winning four additional seats, or three plus the presidency, which would put vice-presidential nominee Paul Ryan in the position of breaking a 50-50 tie.
But circumstances have shifted in Democrats’ favor — most notably, with the retirement of Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) earlier this year, the primary loss for Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.) and the controversial comments that the GOP’s Senate nominee in Missouri, Rep. Todd Akin, made about “legitimate rape.”
All three Senate seats are now considered more likely to go or remain Democratic.
In the House, few expect Democrats to pick up the 25 seats they need to regain control. But at the moment, their campaign committee estimates that at least 28 Democratic challengers are leading or tied against Republican incumbents. And they note that a total of 66 GOP incumbents are running in districts that Obama won four years ago.
“Republican candidates who reside in moderate-to-left-leaning districts who need to keep the Democratic base pacified and still have to pull a sizable portion of independents to win: That is precisely who is hurt by this,” said GOP strategist Ford O’Connell.
Exhibit A could be Romney’s home state of Massachusetts. There, Republican incumbent Scott Brown is struggling to defend his Senate seat against a challenge from Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren.
Brown, who shares some of the same political advisers as Romney, on Tuesday denounced the comments of his party’s presidential nominee, which were made at fundraiser in May and became public Monday when videotaped excerpts of the event were posted on the internet by Mother Jones magazine.
In the video, Romney told a group of wealthy donors that Obama’s most die-hard supporters — whom he described as 47 percent of Americans — are “people who pay no income tax,” are “dependent upon government,” and regard themselves as “victims” who are “entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it.”
Brown said in a statement: “That’s not the way I view the world. As someone who grew up in tough circumstances, I know that being on public assistance is not a spot that anyone wants to be in. Too many people today who want to work are being forced into public assistance for lack of jobs.”
In an interview Tuesday with Fox News’s Neil Cavuto, Romney insisted that his comments were meant to describe the difference between his philosophy and Obama’s.
“Frankly, we have two very different views of America. The president’s view is one of a larger government,” Romney said. “I think a society based on a government-centered nation, where government plays a larger and larger role, redistributes money, that’s the wrong course for America.”
Romney also mentioned a 14-year-old recording of Obama that surfaced Tuesday on the Internet, in which the then-Illinois state senator spoke favorably about the redistribution of wealth during a conference at Loyola University in Chicago.
The controversy comes at the end of a turbulent week for the Romney campaign. The candidate issued what was deemed, even by some in his own party, to be an overly harsh and impulsive criticism of Obama foreign policy during the flare-up of violence in the Middle East. On Sunday, Politico published an account of internal strife within the campaign, centering on the performance of chief strategist Stuart Stevens.
Some Romney supporters predicted that, if Romney frames the issue deftly, the most recent flap could work to his benefit.
Henry Barbour, a Romney fundraiser and Republican National Committee member from Mississippi, said the videotaped remarks could “tee up a conversation that is long overdue” about “the entitlement culture that is strangling the country economically.”
“I think that this does provide a genuine contrast between what Romney wants to offer the country and what Obama wants to offer the country,” said Barbour, who is a nephew and close adviser to former Mississippi governor Haley Barbour. “Romney believes in capitalism and the free market and wants to create 12 million jobs. Obviously, I think the president is perfectly comfortable promoting government dependence.”
Robert Grand, an Indianapolis lobbyist and Romney fundraiser, said he has heard no reaction to the Romney tape from his donor network.
“It’s something a lot of your folks pay attention to, but at the end of the day we have a lot bigger issues out there,” said Grand, who said he has not viewed the tape. “This is a race for leadership in this country, and we have a man who is going to provide strong leadership. The folks I talk with are the people concerned because for 3 1/2 years we’ve had a president who hasn’t led.”

Aaron Blake, Dan Eggen, Philip Rucker, Sean Sullivan and Bill Turque contributed to this report.

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28 Comments

  1. Great. Mitt got caught preaching to the choir. The problem is not that Mitt Romney says 47% of Americans don’t pay any taxes. The problem is that he has no clue as to why they don’t. Maybe he should look at what kind of effect off shoring jobs has had on our economy. There is something he can identify with.

  2. Mittens can’t run his own campaign and has been caught in more lies the Liepage.  Stick a fork in him, he is well done along with his elderly party.

    1. ” … the view that his missteps are fatal”
      … is why he should be stopped BEFORE he is the POTUS and makes more missteps.

    2. Mr. Romney: The plant’s first annual Fourth of July company picnic is this upcoming weekend.
      Employee: Woo-hoo!
      Mr. Romney: No, you misunderstand. The picnic is for me. You will all be spending our Day of Independence slaving away at my mansion under the hot summer sun, without pay, water, or gratitude.
      Employee: D’oh!
      Mr. Romney: Yes, duh-oh indeed.

  3. Everyone in this country with an income should be required to pay something in income taxes.  If your income is small so should your taxesbe small. Large income…higher taxes.  Why is it that the people who pay the least, or no taxes at all, whine about the well-to-do not paying their fair share??  Someone stated that “Romney has no clue why some people pay no taxes”.  Of course he knows why.  Because the current tax laws do not require them to pay!  What Romney said is the truth and that’s why some people have a problem with his statement.
     

    1. Romney himself pays no income tax. He stated in one of his debates with Newt Gingrich that under his (Gingrich’s)
      0% capital gains tax plan, he would pay no taxes. All his income therefore must come from capital gains. So he is paying a much lower rate than you or I.. and even those who don’t pay income taxes, of which he must be one of the 47% he spoke of.

        1. No, he paid taxes on capital gains which is different . His tax rate would have been different if he’d paid income taxes.But we really don’t know for sure if really has paid any taxes before the last two years as he won’t release his tax records.Make one wonder what he has to hide.Certainly we have a look into the type of transparency we could expect from a Romney administration.

          1. Paying taxes on capital gains IS paying income taxes.  Capital gains is income and if you are taxed on it you are paying income taxes.  You are correct in that it is taxed at a different rate.  Try not paying taxes on capital gains and you are likely to be charged with income tax evasion.

      1. This is from USATODAY.com

        Updated 2:59 p.m. ET

        Mitt Romney released his 2010 tax returns and an estimate for 2011 showing he is likely to pay $6.2 million on income of $42.5 million over the two-year period.
        Romney’s tax information — covering more than 500 pages — can be found on his website.
        The tax records show Romney and his wife, Ann, paid an effective tax rate of 13.9% on their adjusted gross income in 2010. The estimate is 15.4% for 2011.
        How does Romney’s effective tax rate compare with other Americans? The average effective tax rate of American taxpayers is 11% on adjusted gross income, according to an analysis by the non-partisan Tax Foundation. Millionaires pay about about 25%, the foundation says.
        INTERACTIVE: Poll tracker

        President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama paid about $454,000 in federal taxes in 2010 on adjusted gross income of about $1.73 million. That translates to an effective tax rate of about 26%.
        Subject: [bdn] Re: Mitt Romney faces a twofold challenge after stumbles

        aroostookme wrote, in response to libsux:

        Romney himself pays no income tax. He stated in one of his debates with Newt Gingrich that under his (Gingrich’s) 0% capital gains tax plan, he would pay no taxes. All his income therefore must come from capital gains. So he is paying a much lower rate than you or I.. and even those who don’t pay income taxes, of which he must be one of the 47% he spoke of.
        Link to comment

  4. Of course, this raises (or ought to raise) the question of whether these “missteps” exist anywhere except in the minds of anti-Romney journalists trying to sell the idea of Romney’s incompetence to the public. They seem to have had remarkably little effect on the poll standings so far, with Romney and Obama continuing to exchange the lead within a narrow range.

    1. The liberal media has lost so much credibility, I don’t think people pay much attention to them anymore. They have become the boy who cried wolf.

      You have an entire network centered around the politics of personal destruction of Mitt Romney. You have news anchors getting personal text messages direct from the White House during their broadcasts. You have news anchors reading liberal blogs to come up with questions for their conservative guests. You have the Dept of Justice coordinating with Media Matters to create a narrative opposing all things conservative. 

      And in the end, we will have a new President and 20 million new jobs because Americans are smarter than liberals would have you believe. 

      1. “The liberal media has lost so much credibility, I don’t think people pay much attention to them anymore.”

        Well, I know  I don’t pay attention to people who parrot what Fox, the corporatist media,  says about the liberal media, anymore .

  5. I can already hear Republicans claiming that Romney lost because he wasn’t a real conservative after Obama is elected, just like they did with McCain. 

  6. Once again, what liberals call a gaffe or a stumble, most Americans agree with. Whether telling Obama that it is disgusting to apologize for free speech or stating that those who depend on the government will probably support Obama anyway, these are only gaffes if you support the liberal point of view.

    If you believe we should make foreign policy based on the Obama stated belief that “we do not want to hurt the feelings of Muslims”, then you should vote for Obama. 

    If you believe the government should redistribute more, spend more and force more people to be dependent on the government, then you should vote for Obama.

    I still believe most Americans want to work to provide for their own family and do not want to compromise our values for terrorists and radicals.

    1. Oh really? Does that include him telling the crowd what he would do if he were Iran? You know, how he said how he would get Nuclear ingredients into a city like Chicago then at the right time set off a “dirty bomb.” Let’s put aside the fact that he doesn’t know the difference between a nuclear bomb and a dirty bomb for a moment, and focus on the fact that a person running for the Presidency of the United States of Amercia stated how he would commit a terrorist act, on US soil (you know if he were Iran). That comment alone disqualifies him from ever being President. If Obama had made a statement like that Congress would be writing up his impeachment paperwork.

      1. What do you think Iran would do when people like you allow them to obtain a nuke and then people like you support open borders? My guess is you would continue to blame others for your failures.

        PS – a dirty bomb is composed of nuclear materials. Someone certainly doesn’t know the difference, but it isn’t Mitt.

    2. A good chunk of that 47% work, and anyone who presumes to know what most Americans agree with, without some evidence, is full of it. Ultimately Romney’s biggest problem with the 47% statement for Republicans is that it’s just too big a number to work well as a dog whistle to stand in for minorities and various “others.” When the plutocrats and their enablers spout that statistic, it should show even white, older Americans that the plutocrats despise them, too, and have just been playing them for dupes and fools the entire time.

  7. It seems to me that the two biggest challenges he faces is his own two feet. He seem incapable of avoiding his tendency of  sticking them in his mouth every time he speaks.

  8. Mitt is right on the money and is correct in
    saying 47% of non taxpayers will more than likely
    vote for govt handouts ie: Obama. Yes, some are
    the soc sec crowd but they have a good idea where
    this country is headed and KNOW their soc sec will
    be okay. it is the welfare lovers and the food stamp
    lovers who think they get this from Obama’s stash.
    They will not vote for Romney…he is absolutely
    correct in surmising that. Take the money from someone
    else and give it to me is all they are concerned with anyway.
    Our community organizer and his crowd have done everything
    under the sun to make Romney look like a devil and yet Romney
    is still right there. Even skewed polls can’t bury him. Obama should
    be scared…very very scared…that he can’t move the polls on his
    own record. Now a snippet of a MAY fundraiser NOW just surfaces
    from Mother Jones? An organization that has 2 left feet, 2 left hands,
    2 left ears and is so left it can only turn left…just amazingly brings
    this out? What a good way to get the pres and the admin to get away
    from the lies about Libya and their incompetent policy. Where are the
    pics of our community organizer at his gala fundraiser with his pals..
    beyonce and jayz? I wonder why we don’t see any of them and the millions spent
    there with all the champagne? Nawww..this libber media can’t bring themselves
    to show us the real truth and show how ridiculous this incompetent really is.
    The sheep love it and could care less that this guy couldn’t run a lemonade
    stand let alone a govt. The sheep don’t want to move ahead..they are jealous
    of anyone who has done well..they want what the person who done well has
    but want it confiscated and GIVEN to them. 4 more years of Mr. Marx and
    the haters of America will have gotten their wsh.

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