Calls
debate a 'brazen' rewrite of history
Washington
– Senior Campaign advisor David Axelrod summoned up the image of
the famous Sinclair Lewis huckster evangelist Elmer Gantry in a
description of the “trouncing” dealt the president by Governor
Mitt Romney.
In
response to piercing questions from Bob Schieffer and other CBS
anchor types, Mr. Axelrod characterized the Romney affect as a
“performance” rather than a fact-filled tour de force as
described by more conservative pundits and talking heads.
“The
president showed up with the intent of answering questions and having
a discussion, an honest discussion of where we will go as a country,
and Romney showed up to deliver a performance, and he delivered a
very good performance,” Axelrod said. “It was completely
un-rooted in fact, it was completely un-rooted in the positions he’s
taken before and he spent 90 minutes trying to undo two years of
campaigning on that stage, but he did it very well.”
Mr.
Schieffer asked a follow-up question. Was he saying Romney “lied or
was dishonest?”
“Well,
yeah, I think he was dishonest,” Mr. Axelrod said. “I’m saying
he was dishonest in his answers, you can characterize that any way
you want.”
What
Mr. Romney actually did was to deliver a “Gantry-esque” bully
pulpit performance that amounts to a “rewrite of history,” said
Mr. Axelrod. He said he means Mr. Romney's personal history of
various tax proposals.
The
fact that certain conservatives have labeled the unemployment figure
dipping below 8 percent for the first time since 2009 as “cooking
the books,” he dismissed as a “lunatic fringe” conspiracy
theory.
Why
didn't the president address the “47 percent” remarks Mr. Romney
made in a private Beverly Hills setting prior to the debate?
Mr.
Axelrod was quick to characterize the Romney position as holding that
47 percent of the population is “shiftless.” He said, “The
president obviously didn’t see the appropriate opportunity. The
president was earnestly trying to answer questions that were asked on
the topics that were being discussed, and he didn’t find the
opportunity to raise it, and it’s obviously well known,” Axelrod
said.
Obama,
Axelrod said, “was a little taken aback by the brazenness with
which Gov. Romney walked away” from his past positions and his
record.
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