Mitt Romney is enjoying an initial burst of
energy after adding Rep. Paul Ryan to the Republican presidential ticket. He is
drawing the biggest and most enthusiastic crowds of his campaign, the same way
that GOP nominee John McCain did four years ago after naming Sarah Palin as his
running mate. Romney is getting what he hoped for when he passed over safer
choices.
But he also has bought trouble, as is clear
from Democrats’ attacks on Ryan’s far-reaching and controversial budget plan,
which would — among other things — transform Medicare into a premium support
program for younger people upon retirement.
Whether or not Romney wanted a debate about
Medicare, an issue that long has favored Democrats, he has one. His campaign
advisers recognize the dangers. From their perspective, it’s better to have the
discussion now than in October. They are trying to take this fight to the
president in a way that no Republican nominee has done before.
On Tuesday, the Romney campaign began its
counterattack on the Medicare issue even before President Obama’s campaign
could air its first ad on the issue. Romney’s ad charges that Obama cut more
than $700 billion from Medicare to help finance his controversial health-care
overhaul.
“We’re the ones who are offering a plan to save Medicare, to protect
Medicare, to strengthen Medicare,” Ryan (Wis.) told Brit Hume of Fox News
Channel. “President Obama is actually damaging Medicare for current seniors.
It’s irrefutable. And that’s why I think this is a debate we want to have, and
that’s a debate we’re going to win.”
Romney is dealing with two problems: the
details of Ryan’s budget blueprint, and questions about the differences between
the running mates’ fiscal and Medicare plans.
Romney and his advisers insist that he will
be running on his plan, not Ryan’s. In part, they’ve done that to remind people
that the tail will not wag the dog, that the running mate will not overshadow
the nominee. All presidential candidates would say the same thing.
But keeping Ryan’s plan out of the debate
is virtually impossible. Romney embraced the conceptual framework of the
congressman’s blueprint long before he selected Ryan as his running mate. At
the time, he could preserve some space to say he wouldn’t follow every detail
of Ryan’s outline.
That was before he put on the ticket a
politician described as the intellectual leader of the GOP who has been in the
thick of the battle over how to transform government through tax cuts, budget
reductions and entitlement reform. Pick Ryan and you get the blueprint as your
own.
On the big issues, Romney and Ryan are in
agreement. They favor big tax cuts in which the wealthiest Americans would
benefit significantly. They have not fully explained how they would offset that
lost revenue. They support reductions in domestic discretionary spending. Both
want changes that would convert Medicare into a premium support program for
younger workers. Their priorities are the same.
Romney hasn’t said whether he has real
differences with Ryan or mostly minor ones — on Medicare or anything else in
the budget proposal. The last thing he wants is a Romney-Ryan debate, but if
there are substantive differences, they ought to be highlighted and explained.
One real difference is that Ryan accepts the cuts Obama made to Medicare as
part of his budget. Romney would restore them but hasn’t explained why he
objects to what Ryan would do.
Romney hoped that the choice of Ryan would
amplify his message that the status quo or even small changes aren’t going to
solve the country’s fiscal problems. That is a big argument and a debate worth
having. Right now, however, Romney is dealing with questions about whether
Ryan’s plan would hurt seniors, the middle class or the poor.
Democrats are seizing the moment. Obama is
traveling across Iowa this week trying to tie Romney via Ryan to congressional
Republicans, whose favorability rating is in the basement. Vice President Biden
is attacking Ryan, almost as if he were the nominee.
Obama campaign advisers are brushing aside
any idea that there is daylight between Romney and Ryan and focusing on Ryan’s
budget for what is likely to be a campaign of negative ads. The Democrats are
using August as they used July, to try to define the opposition before Romney —
and now Ryan — fully defend and define themselves.
Romney’s campaign advisers believe they
have opportunities to win this debate. Obama’s economic record remains the
biggest threat to his reelection bid. He is vulnerable as well to the criticism
that he is not offering real leadership on entitlement reform. The new Medicare
ad seeks to exploit what the president did to Medicare to finance his
health-care program and put Democrats on the defensive.
Ironically, Democrats cried foul over the
new ad, saying Obama was cutting the rate of growth in the program, not
reducing actual spending. That ignores the fact that, in the 1996 campaign,
Democrats attacked Republicans for cutting Medicare spending when Republicans
were reducing the rate of growth in the program.
Romney’s convention gives him a chance to
tie everything together: the candidate’s biography presented in its most
positive way; the policy differences with Obama outlined with clarity; the
economic and fiscal arguments advanced with sharpness and elevation; and the
Obama attacks rebutted cleanly. The campaign may look and feel different at
that point.
But Romney and Ryan face the possibility
that, before the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Obama and the
Democrats will define Ryan’s budget — and in particular his changes to Medicare
— so negatively that the damage will be long-lasting. That’s why Romney’s
campaign has moved quickly to blunt the Medicare attacks. But this fight is
just starting, which is what makes these weeks a defining moment in the
campaign.
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