If you're new to this story, read these three posts -- preferably in order -- to get caught up. Team Obama turned up the heat on the entire controversy yesterday afternoon when Deputy Campaign Manager Stephanie Cutter told reporters that Mitt Romney is either a liar or a felon, wielding the Boston Globe's non-scoop as "new" evidence on Romney's tenure at Bain:
Deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter laid out the issue as the Obama team sees it: “Either Mitt Romney, through his own words and his own signature, was misrepresenting his position at Bain to the SEC, which is a felony. Or," she said, "he was misrepresenting his position at Bain to the American people to avoid responsibility for some of the consequences of his investments,” including layoffs and the outsourcing of jobs.
"Felony" is a very serious word to raise in the context of a presidential campaign. Romney's campaign manager Matt Rhoades promptly unloaded on Cutter:
"President Obama's campaign hit a new low today when one of its senior advisers made a reckless and unsubstantiated charge to reporters about Mitt Romney that was so over the top that it calls into question the integrity of their entire campaign," Rhoades said. "President Obama ought to apologize for the out-of-control behavior of his staff, which demeans the office he holds. Campaigns are supposed to be hard fought, but statements like those made by Stephanie Cutter belittle the process and the candidate on whose behalf she works."
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FactCheck.org even takes the unusual step of citing other fact-checking entities that concur with its numerous rulings in Romney's favors:
Fortune’s Dan Primack — who covers Wall Street “deals and dealmakers” — addressed the Mother Jones reporting in a July 2 article that came to the same conclusion we do. Primack’s more recent reporting we’ve already noted.
The Washington Post‘s Fact Checker, Glenn Kessler, rebutted the Boston Globe story in a July 12 piece. “Just because you are listed as an owner of shares does not mean you have a managerial role,” Kessler writes. We agree.
Before the Globe story broke, the Columbia Journalism Review’s Brendan Nyhan stated: “[T]he specific cases cited by the Obama campaign largely concern actions taken by those companies during a period in which Romney was not making operational decisions at the firm. Journalists must be clear about this distinction.” After the Globe story, CJR’s Greg Marx wrote “there’s less new in the Globe article than the attention it has drawn suggests.”
ABC News’ Devin Dwyer reported July 12, after the Globe‘s story appeared: “Team Obama does not provide any specific evidence to back up claims that Romney was actively managing Bain between 1999 and 2002.”
And yet Team Obama is refusing to back down, piling lie upon lie as it continues a scorched-earth character assassination campaign against Mitt Romney. Eleven months ago, Democrats telegraphed their "kill Romney" strategy. They're executing it right now. The truth is that they don't care how many independent, non-partisan organizations demonstrate their accusations and smears to be totally false -- they're going to repeat them endlessly until they stick. Our "post-partisan" healer is presiding over the epitome of a dishonorable, ends-justify-the-means campaign. While the media has engaged in a little bit of tut-tutting, most outlets are glossing over the story. Politico's take is particularly egregious. Note the bolded portion:
On the facts, nothing terribly new was added to the Bain equation by the Boston Globe story charging that Mitt Romney controlled the company for three years longer than he previously claimed. Several fact-checking organizations said the charges aren’t exactly breaking news and Romney’s denials have some validity. The problem for the Romney campaign, when it comes to the Bain issue, is that things are reaching the point where the facts don’t really matter. The bigger problem is that the Bain cloud now hanging over the former Massachusetts governor is growing daily, and the Romney campaign still hasn’t found a compelling way to respond to what’s becoming the driving narrative, fairly or unfairly, of the 2012 campaign.
It's like he's explicitly denouncing himself four years in advance. 'Hope and Change' was a total fraud.
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