Romney's campaign seized on Obama's comment
that "if you own a business, you didn't build that," to portray the
president as unsympathetic to small businesses that help boost the U.S.
economy.
Obama's point was that successful business
owners have had the public's help at some point in their lives through public
education, roads or other government-funded projects that created an
environment for businesses to bloom.
"It wasn't a gaffe," Romney said
at a trucking company just outside of Boston last week. "It was instead
his ideology."
On Tuesday Obama's campaign released an ad
rejecting Romney's interpretation of the remarks, and at a campaign event in
Oregon, the president addressed the issue directly.
"He's been twisting my words around to
suggest that I don't value small business," Obama said of his Republican
opponent.
"Now, keep in mind, in politics you
have to endure a certain amount of spin. That's - everybody does it; I
understand that ... Although I have to say when people omit entire sentences
from a speech and they start splicing and dicing, they may have tipped a little
bit over their skis. They may have gone over the edge," he said.
Obama said he had cut taxes on small
businesses 18 times as president, and he defended his original comments with a
list of ways that public investment had helped companies prosper.
"If you talk to any business owner,
small or large, they'll tell you what also helps them succeed alongside their
hard work, their initiative, their great ideas is the ability to hire workers
with the right skills and the right education," he said.
"What helps them succeed is the ability
to ship and sell their products on new roads and bridges and ports and wireless
networks. What helps them succeed is having access to cutting- edge technology
which, like the Internet, often starts with publicly funded research and
development."
In a rebuttal to the Obama campaign's ad
about the subject, a Romney spokesman said the president's original comment
spoke for itself.
"It's clear what President Obama
believes because he told us: 'if you've got a business - you didn't build that.
Somebody else made that happen,'" Romney spokesman Ryan Williams said.
"He said it, and he meant it."
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