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Full Transcript of the Mitt Romney Secret Video
Additional highlights include Romney mocking immigration and pondering how he'd exploit a pre-election hostage crisis.
— By the MoJo News Team on Wed. September 19, 2012 1:00 AM PDT
Below is a complete transcript, produced by Mother Jones, of the entire unedited Romney videos
that we published on Tuesday. (See our exclusive coverage of Romney writing off Obama voters
and trashing the Mideast peace process
at his recent fundraiser in Florida.) Read on, or jump directly to these highlights from Romney:
* On the 47 percent
of Americans "who will vote for the president no matter what."
* On the dividends of his anticipated November 6 victory:
"we'll see—without actually doing anything—we'll actually get a boost in the economy."
* On the "almost unthinkable prospects" for Mideast peace:
"I look at the Palestinians not wanting to see peace anyway…and I say there's just no way."
And here are some telling moments you may not have heard about yet:
* Mocking immigration in the United States:
"[If] you have no skill or experience…you're welcome to cross the border and stay here for the rest of your life."
* Envisioning a pre-election hostage crisis, à la Iran and Jimmy Carter:
"If something of that nature presents itself, I will work to find a way to take advantage of the opportunity."
* Claiming that "the Fed is buying like three-quarters of the debt that America issues."
(Which, despite Romney's expertise in finance, is plain wrong.
)
* Joking about media strategy and his reputation as a "rich, rich guy": "You know that I'm as poor as a church mouse."
* Making enemies on the late-night talk show circuit:
"Now Letterman hates me because I've been on Leno more than him."
* An odd rant from an audience member:
"How are you going to win if 54 percent of the voters think China's
economy is bigger than ours? Or if it costs 4 cents to make a penny and
we keep making pennies? Canada got it right a month ago. Why isn't
someone saying, 'Stop making pennies, round it to the nearest nickel?'
You know, that's an easy thing, compared to
Iran."_________________________________________
Romney: ...And I guess everybody here is a dignitary, and I appreciate
your help. And by the way, I am serious about the food. Bring that…clear
the place, but Hilary has to eat her beets. [Audience laughs.] I'm
gonna—because the table is small enough and the room is intimate enough,
I'd like to spend our time responding to questions you have, listening
to advice you might have. Occasionally, as I did just a moment ago, I
get envelopes like that, which is, and I'll open this and there'll be
campaign ideas—"Why don't you talk about the following issues…"—so I'm
happy to take advice and then we can all vote on it, whether it's a good
piece of advice or bad advice. And so we'll get a chance to do that,
but I'm looking to get your perspectives. Just to tell you a couple of
things you may not know about me. You probably know that I'm father of
five and grandfather now of 18—my oldest son just had twins just last
week, and so our grandchild nest is getting larger, and they're a source
of great joy. When I was probably halfway through my career
at Bain Consulting, I met with a lawyer to draft a will, and she said,
"How do you want to divide what estate you might eventually have?" And I
said—I didn't have anything at that point—I said, "I want to divide it
equally among my five sons." And she said, "Well, how much will you want
to give to the grandchildren that they will ultimately have," and I
said, "Well, I don't want to give anything to the grandchildren—I'll
give it to the sons, and they in turn will give it to their children as
needed." And she said, "You'll change your mind." And I said, "No, I
don't think so." So I saw her not long ago, and I said, "I don't want to
give anything to my sons, I want to give it [to all to my
grandchildren.] [Audience laughs.]
Audience member: You lost Samantha's vote. [Audience laughs.]
Romney: This, uh, it's not as…
Audience member: This is my daughter. [More laughter.]
Romney: It's not just because I love my grandchildren, as I do, and I
love my sons and [unintelligible], it's that I'm very concerned about
what the nation is gonna be like over the coming decade or two. And I
really do. As I said in my remarks earlier, I see these two very
different scenarios. One is as America really powering the world
economy, with an extraordinary economy here, with China working with us,
wanting to see stability in the world, and a very vibrant America, with
freedom and prosperity for the great bulk of the American people. On
the other hand, I really do see something like Europe. And I think
that's the path we're on right now. So that's why I wanna make sure what
little I'll have left after the campaigns goes to you know, goes to my
grandchildren. That's one piece about me that you may not know. The
other is just about my heritage—my dad, you probably know, was the
governor of Michigan and was the head of a car company, but he was born
in Mexico. And had he been born of Mexican parents I'd have a better
shot at winning this, but he was [audience laughs] unfortunately born of
Americans living in Mexico. They'd lived there for a number of years,
and, uh, I mean I say that jokingly, but it'd be helpful if they'd been
Latino…
Audience member: Pull an Elizabeth Warren!
Romney: Pardon?
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Audience member: Pull an Elizabeth Warren.
Romney: That's right. Those that don't know Elizabeth Warren—she's the
woman who's running for US Senate in Massachusetts, who said that she's
Cherokee, has put in her application over the years that she's Cherokee,
and Harvard put down that she's one of their minority faculty members.
It turns out that at most she's 1/32 Cherokee, and even that can't be
proven. So, in any event, yeah, I can put down my dad was born in Mexico
and leave it at that. But his dad was in construction, very successful
in Mexico, but in America went broke more than once. So my dad never had
the money or time to get a college degree. Without a college degree,
became head of a big car company and ultimately a governor. And believed
in America, believed in the opportunity in this country, never doubted
for a moment that he could achieve his dreams. And Ann's dad, my wife's
dad, was born in Wales. His dad was a coal miner. This coal miner got
injured in a coal mining accident; realizing that there was no future
there for him or his four children, he came to Detroit and worked in the
auto factories until he could save enough money to bring his kids over,
which he did. And then they got together as a family and said, you
know, to be successful in America, you've got to get an education. And
they couldn't afford an education. And the kids and the parents said you
know, if we all work, and we all save, we could afford to send one of
us to college. And they, they sent my wife's dad.
Can you imagine working every day, taking a couple of jobs, saving your
money so that your brother could go to—I mean, I would never do that for
my brother—that he could go to co…so he went to college, and got a
degree at the General Motors Institute of Technology, which is one of
these programs where you work a semester, and then you go to school a
semester and…and then after it was over he started a little company, he
became more successful, and he was able to hire his brothers and his
brother-in-law, and provide for them in an extraordinary way. By the
way, both my dad and Ann's dad did quite well in their life, but when
they came to the end of their lives, and, and passed along inheritances
to Ann and to me, we both decided to give it all away. So, I had
inherited nothing. Everything that Ann and I have we earned the
old-fashioned way, and that's by hard work and…[applause] I see that—
Audience member: You've just lost Samantha's vote for a second time. [Audience laughs.]
Audience member (female): These jokes are [unintelligible]. [More laughter.]
Romney: I say that because there's the percent that's, "Oh, you were
born with a silver spoon," you know, "You never had to earn anything,"
and so forth. And, and frankly, I was born with a silver spoon, which is
the greatest gift you could have, which is to get born in America. I'll
tell ya, there is—95 percent of life is set up for you if you're born
in this country. And I remember going to—sorry just to bore you with
stories—but I was, when I was back in my private equity days, we went to
China to buy a factory there, employed about 20,000 people, and they
were almost all young women between the ages of about 18 and 22 or 23.
They were saving for potentially becoming married, and they worked in
these huge factories, they made various small appliances, and as we were
walking through this facility, seeing them work, the number of hours
they worked per day, the pittance they earned, living in dormitories
with little bathrooms at the end with maybe ten rooms. And the rooms,
they had 12 girls per room, three bunk beds on top of each other. You've
seen them.
Audience member: Oh, yeah.
Romney: And around this factory was a fence, a huge fence with barbed
wire, and guard towers. And we said, "Gosh, I can't believe that you,
you know, you keep these girls in." They said, "No, no, no—this is to
keep other people from coming in. Because people want so badly to come
work in this factory that we have to keep them out, or they'll just come
in here and start working and try and get compensated. So, we—this is
to keep people out." And they said, "Actually, Chinese New Year, is the
girls go home, sometimes they decide they've saved enough money and they
don't come back to the factory." And he said, "And so on the weekend
after Chinese New Year, there'll be a line of people hundreds long
outside the factory, hoping that some girls haven't come back and they
can come to the factory. And so, as we were experiencing this for the
first time, for me to see a factory like this in China some years ago,
the Bain partner I was with turned to me and said, "You know, 95 percent
of life is settled if you're born in America." This is an amazing land.
And what we have is unique, and fortunately it is so special we're
sharing it with the world. I'm concerned about the future, but also
optimistic as I said, and I look forward to getting America back on
track, and having people plan on bringing their ideas and their dreams
to this country. We get big dreamers, by the way. Oh, I just, we didn't
talk about immigration today. Gosh, I'd love to bring in more legal
immigrants that have skill and [unintelligible]. I'd like to staple a
green card to every Ph.D. in the world and say, "Come to America, we
want you here." Instead, we make it hard for people who get educated
here or elsewhere to make this their home. Unless, of course, you have
no skill or experience, in which case you're welcome to cross the border
and stay here for the rest of your life. [Audience laughs.] It's very
strange. It's run by people who don't understand the words "global
competition of ideas," and our idea has to win, but only if America
reigns strong. But with that introduction, I'm going to turn to you for
counsel, advice, or questions. Policy questions. Wanna talk about tax
policy? Or political questions? How I win? Please.
Audience member: One comment, Governor.
Romney: Yes.
Audience member: The debates are gonna be coming, and I hope at the
right moment you can turn to President Obama, look at the American
people, and say, "If you vote to reelect President Obama, you're voting
to bankrupt the United States." I hope you keep that in your quiver
because that's what gonna happen. And I think it's going to be very
effective. Just wanted to give you that.
Romney: Yeah, it's interesting…the former head of Goldman Sachs, John
Whitehead, was also the former head of the New York Federal Reserve. And
I met with him, and he said as soon as the Fed stops buying all the
debt that we're issuing—which they've been doing, the Fed's buying like
three-quarters of the debt that America issues. He said, once that's
over, he said we're going to have a failed Treasury auction, interest
rates are going to have to go up. We're living in this borrowed fantasy
world, where the government keeps on borrowing money. You know, we
borrow this extra trillion a year, we wonder who's loaning us the
trillion? The Chinese aren't loaning us anymore. The Russians aren't
loaning it to us anymore. So who's giving us the trillion? And the
answer is we're just making it up. The Federal Reserve is just taking it
and saying, "Here, we're giving it.' It's just made up money, and this
does not augur well for our economic future.
You know, some of these things are complex enough it's not easy for
people to understand, but your point of saying, bankruptcy usually
concentrates the mind. Yeah, George.
Audience member, "George": Governor, to your point on complexity. How
is—you've traveled around America and talked to people in larger groups
and perhaps people with different backgrounds, and people in this room:
To what extent do people really understand that we're hurtling toward a
cliff, and to what extent do people understand the severity of the
fiscal situation we're in. Do people get it?
Romney: They don't. By and large people don't get it. People in our
party, and part of—it's our fault because we've been talking about
deficits and debt for about 25 or 30 years as a party, and so they've
heard us say it and say it and say it. The fact that Greece is going
what it's going through, and they read about France and Italy and Spain,
has finally made this issue topical for the American people. And so
when you do polls, and you ask people what is the biggest issue in the
2012 election, No. 1 is the economy and jobs by a wide margin. But No. 2
is the deficit. But debt, that doesn't calculate for folks, but the
deficit does. They recognize you can't go on forever like this. Although
the people who recognize that tend to be Republicans, and the people
who don't recognize that tend to be Democrats. And what we have to get
is that 5 or 10 percent in the middle who sometimes vote Republican,
sometimes vote Democrat, and have them understand how important this is.
It's a challenge. I did the calculation for folks today, and USA
Today publishes this every year. It's a front-page story: the headline
once a year, it somehow escapes people's attention, and that is, if you
take the total national debt and the unfunded liabilities of Medicare,
Social Security, and Medicaid, the amount of debt plus unfunded
liabilities per household in America is $520,000. Per household.
Audience member: It's like 12 times their income, right?
Romney: At least. 10, 12 times their income. Even though we're not going
to be writing the check for that amount per household, they're going to
be paying the interest on that. You'll be paying the interest on that.
[Audience laughs.] Because we—my generation will be long gone, and
you'll be paying the interest. And so you'll be paying taxes, not only
for the things you want in your generation, but for all the things we
spent money on, which is just—it's extraordinary to think the tax rates,
someone calculated what would happen. If we don't change Medicare or
Social Security, the tax rate—you know what the payroll tax is now, it's
15.3 percent—if we don't change those programs, that tax rate will have
to ultimately rise to 44 percent. The payroll tax. Then there's the
income tax on top, which the president wants to take to 40 percent. Then
there's state tax in most states. And sales tax. So you end up having
to take 100 percent of people's income. And yet the president, three and
a half years in, won't talk about reforming Social Security or
Medicare. And when the Republicans do, it's "Oh, you're throwing granny
off the cliff." It's like you're killing the kids. The biggest surprise
that I have is that young people will vote for Democrats. They look at
this and say, "Holy cow! The only guys who are worried about the future
of our country and our future are Republicans." But the Democrats, they
talk about social issues, draw in the young people, and they vote on
that issue. It's like, I mean, there won't be any houses like this if we
stay on the road we're on.
Please. Yeah—I heard a voice, please.
Audience member: Gov. Romney, we are former Bostonians, and we'll talk about how we know you.
Romney: Uh, oh. [Audience laughter, cross talk.]
Audience member: It's good!…and we totally agree with what you said
economically. But I would like to know, and I would like to get into
much more discussion on what I consider the real issues: the real issues
of Iran, and how your point of view differs from President Obama's.
Romney: Thank you—and by the way, start eating, those of you who have
food in front of you that's warm, start eating. I'm standing up so I can
see you, but I'm not standing up so you that you have to stop and look
at me. It's important to look at your food as you're eating it.
[Audience laughs.] Noticed you putting a fork in your finger here, all
right…[cross talk, laughter].
You are right, which is a nuclear Iran is an unthinkable outcome, not
just for our friends in Israel and our friends in Europe, but also for
us. Because Iran is the state sponsor of terror in the world, has
Hezbollah now throughout Latin America, Hezbollah with fissile material.
If I were Iran, and a crazed fanatic, I'd say let's get a little
fissile material to Hezbollah, have them carry it to Chicago or some
other place, and then if anything goes wrong or if America starts acting
up, we'll just say, "Guess what, unless you stand down, why we're gonna
let off a dirty bomb." This is where we head, where American can be
held up and blackmailed by Iran, by the mullahs, by crazy people. So we
really don't have any option but to keep Iran from having a nuclear
weapon.
I'll give the specifics about Iran, and then maybe talk more broadly
about foreign policy. The specific on Iran is that we should have put in
place crippling sanctions at the beginning of the president's term. We
did not. He will say, "Yes, but Russian wouldn't go along with us."
Well, he gave Russia their No. 1 foreign objective: For a decade, all
they've cared about is getting the missile defense sites out of Poland,
and he gave them that and got nothing in return. He could have—I
presume—gotten them to agree to crippling sanctions on Iran. He did not,
which is in my opinion, one of the greatest foreign policy errors of
the modern time. And by the way, if he could not have gotten that from
Russia, he should have kept the missile defense sites in Poland, just to
keep a bargaining chip on table. I mean, put nothing in if he wants—I
would have kept them, I wouldn't have traded them away, but that's where
he was.
No. 2, we should have been aggressively supporting the voices of dissent
in Iran, and when there was an effort towards revolution there we
should been aggressively supporting. And finally we should have made it
clear, at least by now, that we have military plans to potentially
remove their nuclear capabilities. That doesn't mean we actually pull
the trigger, but it means we communicate to them that we're ready to do
so. And that it is unacceptable to America to have a nuclear Iran.
Instead what this administration has done is communicate to the Iranians
that we're more worried about Israel attacking them than we are about
them becoming nuclear. It's extraordinary. So those are some thoughts
directly at Iran.
I'll step back on foreign policy: The president's foreign policy, in my
opinion, is formed in part by a perception that he has that his
magnetism and his charm and his persuasiveness is so compelling that he
can sit down with people like Putin, Chávez, and Ahmadinejad. And that
they'll find we're such wonderful people that they'll go on with us. And
they'll stop doing bad things. And it's an extraordinarily naive
perception, and it has led to huge errors in North Korea, in Iraq,
obviously in Iran, in Egypt, around the world. My own view is that that
the centerpiece of American foreign policy has to be strength.
Everything I do will be calculated to increasing America's strength.
When you stand by your allies, you increase your strength. When you
attack your allies, you become weaker. When you stand by your
principles, you get stronger. When you have a big military—that's bigger
than anyone else's—you're stronger. [Unintelligible.] When you have a
strong economy, you build America's strength. For me, everything is
about strength and communicating to people what is and is not
acceptable. It's speaking softly but carrying a very, very, very big
stick. And this president instead speaks loudly and carries a tiny
stick. And that is, you know, that's not the right course for a foreign
policy. I saw Dr. Kissinger in New York—you're not eating! [Audience
laughs.]
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Audience member: I'm mesmerized! [unintelligible]
Romney: He's bored to tears. [Audience laughs.] I saw Dr. Kissinger; I
said to him, "How are we perceived around the world?" And he said, "One
word: VEAK!" [Audience laughs.] We are weak, and that's how this
president is perceived, by our friends and, unfortunately, by our foes.
And it's no wonder that people like Kim Jong Un, the new leader of North
Korea, announces a long-range missile test only a week after he said he
wouldn't. Because, it's like, what's this president going to do about
it? If you can't act, why, don't threaten. [To another audience member
with a question] Please.
Audience member: [Asks about Iraq. (Garbled.)]
Romney: I'm just gonna taste this by the way. I just wanna show you how
it's done: You take this in your fork…[Audience laughs.]…you put it
in…That's good, that's good. [To audience member]: Please, go ahead.
Audience member: If you get the call as president, and you had
hostages…Ronald Reagan was able to make a statement, even before he
became, was actually sworn in—
Romney: Yeah—
Audience member: the hostages were released—
Romney: on the day of his inauguration, yeah.
Audience member: So my question is, really, how can you sort of duplicate that scenario?
Romney: Ohhhh. [A few chuckles in audience.] I'm gonna ask you, how do I duplicate that scenario.
Audience member: I think that had to do with the fact that the Iranians
perceived Reagan would do something to really get them out. In other
words [unintelligible]…and that's why I'm suggesting that something that
you say over the next few months gets the Iranians to understand that
their pursuit of the bomb is something that you would predict and I
think that's something that could possibly resonate very well with
American Republican voters.
Romney: I appreciate the idea. I can't—one of the other things that's
frustrating to me is that at a typical day like this, when I do three or
four events like this, the number of foreign policy questions that I
get are between zero and one. And the American people are not
concentrated at all on China, on Russia, Iran, Iraq. This president's
failure to put in place a status forces agreement allowing 10-20,000
troops to stay in Iraq? Unthinkable! And yet, in that election, in the
Jimmy Carter election, the fact that we have hostages in Iran, I mean,
that was all we talked about. And we had the two helicopters crash in
the desert, I mean that's—that was—that was the focus, and so him
solving that made all the difference in the world. I'm afraid today if
you said, "We got Iran to agree to stand down a nuclear weapon," they'd
go hold on. It's really a, but…by the way, if something of that nature
presents itself, I will work to find a way to take advantage of the
opportunity.
Romney [to another audience member]: Please—yes?
Audience member: It's your lucky night: more foreign policy! [Audience
laughs/crosstalk.]…actually the first time you were in Jerusalem. And we
appreciate you being there. How do you think that the Palestinian
problem can be solved, and what are you going to do about it?
Romney: I'm torn by two perspectives in this regard. One is the one
which I've had for some time, which is that the Palestinians have no
interest whatsoever in establishing peace. And that the pathway to peace
is almost unthinkable to accomplish. Now, why do I say that? Some might
say well just let the Palestinians have the West Bank and have security
and set up a separate nation for the Palestinians. And then come a
couple of thorny questions. And I don't have a map here to look at the
geography. But the border between Israel and the West Bank is obviously
right there, right next to Tel Aviv, which is the financial capital, the
industrial capital of Israel. The center of Israel. It's, uh—what? The
border would be maybe seven miles from Tel Aviv to what would be the
West Bank?
Audience member: Nine.
Romney: Nine miles. Okay, I'd be close. Nine miles. The challenge is the
other side of the West Bank…the other side of the West Bank, the other
side of what would be this new Palestinian state would either be Syria
at one point or Jordan. And, of course, the Iranians would want to do
through the West Bank exactly what they did through Lebanon and what
they did in Gaza. Which is the Iranians would want to bring missiles and
armament into the West Bank and potentially threaten Israel. So Israel,
of course, would have to say that can't happen. We've got to keep the
Iranians from bringing weaponry into the West Bank. Well, that means
that—who?—the Israelis are going to control the border between Jordan,
Syria, and this new Palestinian nation? Well, the Palestinians would
say, "Ah, no way! We're an independent country. You can't guard our
border with other Arab nations." And then how about the airport? How
about flying into this Palestinian nation? Are we going to allow
military aircraft to come in? And weaponry to come in? And if not, who's
going to keep it from coming in? Well, the Israelis. Well, the
Palestinians are going to say, "We're not an independent nation if
Israel is able to come in and tell us what can land at our airport."
These are problems, and they're very hard to solve, alright?
And I look at the Palestinians not wanting to see peace anyway, for
political purposes, committed to the destruction and elimination of
Israel, and these thorny issues, and I say there's just no way. And so
what you do is you say you move things along the best way you can. You
hope for some degree of stability, but you recognize that it's going to
remain an unsolved problem. I mean, we look at that in China and Taiwan.
All right, we have a potentially volatile situation, but we sort of
live with it. And we kick the ball down the field and hope that
ultimately, somehow, something will happen and resolve. We don't go to
war to try and resolve it.
On the other hand, I got a call from a former secretary of state—and I
won't mention which one it was—but this individual said to me, "You
know, I think there's a prospect for a settlement between the
Palestinians and the Israelis after the Palestinian elections." I said,
"Really?" And his answer was, "Yes, I think there's some prospect." And I
didn't delve into it but you know, I always keep open the idea of, I
have to tell ya, the idea of pushing on the Israelis?—to give something
up, to get the Palestinians to act, is the worst idea in the world. We
have done that time and time and time again. It does not work. So, the
only answer is show your strength. Again, American strength, American
resolve, as the Palestinians someday reach the point where they want
peace more than we're trying to push peace on them—and then it's worth
having the discussion. Until then, it's just wishful thinking. [Audience
crosstalk.]
Audience member: Individuals in this room obviously are your supporters.
I am very concerned that the average American, who doesn't know you,
there's a terrible misconception. And I spend numerous hours trying to
[unintelligible]. Years and years ago, I called George Bush Sr., and he
had helped me in my campaign in Massachusetts when I ran for Senate. I
told him that there's a guy named Clinton who's running for the
following reasons. And he laughed. Right now, I'm very concerned…Women
would not want to be involved for you. Hispanics, majority of them do
not want to vote for you. College students don't. After talking to them,
and explaining and rationalizing on a one-on-one basis, we are able to
change their opinions. But on a mass level, what do you want us to do,
this group here, as your emissaries, going out to convert these
individuals to someone who's obviously going to be such an incredible
asset to this country. We want you.
Romney: Well…
Audience member: But what do we do? Just tell us what we can help…
Romney: I have—I have some good news for you. It's not impossible. Now,
the reason I say that is for instance, the New York Times had a poll
last week, the New York Times and NBC, and I was leading by two points
among women. All right. Now, the president came out and said this is an
outrageous poll, they don't know what they were doing—by the way, the
polls at this stage make no difference at all—but the point is, women
are open to supporting me. They like the president [unintelligible], but
they're disappointed. They're disappointed with the jobs they're seeing
for their kids, they're disappointed with their own economic standing
right now. So we can capture women's votes, we're having a much harder
time with Hispanic voters. And if the Hispanic voting bloc becomes as
committed to the Democrats as the African American voting bloc has in
the past, why we're in trouble as a party and, I think, as a nation.
Audience member: Rubio!
(Different) audience member: Exactly.
Audience member: Pick him up!
Romney: And so…[Audience laughs.] We have some great—we have some great
Hispanic leaders in our party who will help communicate what our party
stands for, and what I think, frankly, what I need you to do is to raise
millions of dollars, because the president's going to have about $800
to $900 million. And that's—that's by far the most important thing you
could do.
Audience member: [Unintelligible.]
Romney: Because, well, because you don't have the capacity to speak to
hundreds of thousands of people. I will be in those debates. It will be,
I don't know, 150 million Americans watching. If I do well, it'll help.
If I don't, it won't help…
Audience member: You will do so well. Your debates are incredible. [Audience laughs, claps.]
Romney: Thank you, thanks, thank you. But advertising makes a
difference, and the president will engage in a personal character
assassination campaign. And so we'll have to fire back one, in defense,
and No. 2, in offense. And that's [unintelligible]…Florida will be one
of those states that is the key state. And so all the money will get
spent in 10 states, and this is one of them. So, I—the best thing I
could ask you to do—I mean, yeah, sure, talk to people and tell them how
you know me and word of mouth makes a big difference. But you know, I'm
not terribly well known by the general American public, because…
Audience member: You're known as a rich boy. I mean, they say, "He's a rich man."
Romney: They don't. But don't worry—given all those negative things,
given all those negative things, the fact that I'm either tied or close
to the president, and the fact that, you know, he's out there talking
about the one-year anniversary of Osama bin Laden being captured,
unemployment coming down, unleashing his campaign, new campaign, and
we're still sort of tied? That's very interesting. And it's, it's
encouraging. Please.
Audience member: I would disagree with that. I think a lot of young
children coming out of college feel they're let down by the president.
And they feel there's not a job out there for them, and [unintelligible]
making $60,000 and now they're making $30,000. Very similar to the U6.
Romney: Yeah, yeah.
Audience member: My question to you is, Why don't you stick up for
yourself? To me, you should be so proud of your wealth. That's what we
all aspire to be—we kill ourselves, we don't work a nine to five. We're
away from our families five days a week. I'm away from my four girls
five days a week and my wife. Why not stick up for yourself and say,
"Why is it bad to be, to aspire to be wealthy and successful? You know,
why is it bad to kill yourself? And why is it bad to cut 30 jobs that
protect 300?" And, when people talk about you cutting jobs, you save
companies that were failing...[unintelligible]. So my question is, when
does that stand up…[unintelligible].
(Different) audience member: …neighborhood…and worked his way up from
nothing to be an incredibly successful entrepreneur, so, it, it…
Romney: You heard in my speech tonight, I talked it [crosstalk]...again, but if it…oh, you weren't here.
Audience member: He came here, so he missed the…
Romney: In every stump speech I give, I speak about the fact that people
who dream and achieve enormous success do not make us poorer—they make
us better off. And the Republican audience that I typically speak to
applauds. I said that tonight, and the media's there, and they write
about it, they say that Romney defends success in America and dreamers
and so forth. So they write about it. But in terms of what gets through
to the American consciousness, that's—I have very little influence on
that in this stage, as to what they write about. And that will
happen—and we'll have three debates, we'll have a chance to talk about
that in the debates. There will be ads which attack me; I will fire back
in a way that describes in the best way we can the fact that if, the
theme in my speech is that—I wind up in, you know, the ambassadors
[unintelligible] me today, several times—I wind up talking about how the
thing which I find most disappointing in this president is his attack
of one American against another American, the division of America based
on going after those who have been successful.
And then I quote Marco Rubio, I tell in my speeches, I say, Marco
Rubio—I think what I said would be [unintelligible]…I also think I said
that at a fundraising event earlier today, but I did when I was in
Empire…[unintelligible] [Audience laughs.]…I just said Sen. Rubio says
that when he grew up here, poor, that they looked at people that had a
lot of wealth, and his parents never once said, "We need some of what
they have, they should give us some." Instead they said that you work
hard and go to school, someday we might be able to have enough.
That's…[Applause.] I will continue to do that, how much of that gets
picked up, there are so many things that don't get picked up in a
campaign because people aren't watching them. By the way, most people
don't watch during the summer. I said we're going to go into a season
here starting with the beginning of June with almost no attention paid,
then after Labor Day, in September and October, that's when it'll get
fun.
Audience member: For the last three years, all everybody's been told is,
"Don't worry, we'll take care of you." How are you going to do it, in
two months before the elections, to convince everybody you've got to
take care of yourself?
Romney: There are 47 percent of the people who will vote for the
president no matter what. All right, there are 47 percent who are with
him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are
victims, who believe that government has a responsibility to care for
them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to
housing, to you name it. That that's an entitlement. And the government
should give it to them. And they will vote for this president no matter
what. And I mean, the president starts off with 48, 49, 48—he starts off
with a huge number. These are people who pay no income tax. Forty-seven
percent of Americans pay no income tax. So our message of low taxes
doesn't connect. And he'll be out there talking about tax cuts for the
rich. I mean that's what they sell every four years. And so my job is
not to worry about those people—I'll never convince them that they
should take personal responsibility and care for their lives. What I
have to do is convince the 5 to 10 percent in the center that are
independents that are thoughtful, that look at voting one way or the
other depending upon in some cases emotion, whether they like the guy or
not, what it looks like. I mean, when you ask those people…we do all
these polls—I find it amazing—we poll all these people, see where you
stand on the polls, but 45 percent of the people will go with a
Republican, and 48 or 4…
[Recording stops.]
Romney: …and about twice as much as China, not 10 times as much like
it's reported. And we have responsibility for the whole world. They're
only focused on one little area of the world, the South China Sea, the
East China Sea, that's it. And they're building a military at a rapid
rate. So this idea that somehow we've already spent so much money in the
military—it's like, guys, don't overthink how strong we are. We—you
probably know it, this was a couple of years ago, but we had one of our
aircraft carriers sailing by Japan, and the Chinese pulled up behind it
in a diesel sub, in a super-quiet diesel sub, pulled up behind it. It
could have been torpedoed. And, I mean, we're in that kind of—our Navy's
smaller in number of ships than anytime since 1917, and this president
wants to shrink it. The list goes on. Our Air Force is older and smaller
than anytime since '47 when the Air Force was formed, and he wants to
shrink it. If we go the way of Europe, which is spending 1 to 2 percent
of their economy on the military, we will not be able to have freedom in
the world.
Audience member: When the [unintelligible] in September, the markets are
going to be looking—marginal tax rates going up, overheads going, fine,
but sequestration under the debt ceiling deal—what do they call it?
Romney: Taxageddon?
Advertise on MotherJones.com
Audience member: Yeah, they call it that. The Obamacare, taxes on
dividends and capital gains—I mean, the markets are going to be speaking
very wildly in October on all of those issues.
Romney: They'll probably be looking at what the polls are saying. If it
looks like I'm going to win, the markets will be happy. If it looks like
the president's going to win, the markets should not be terribly happy.
It depends, of course, which markets you're talking about, which types
of commodities and so forth, but my own view is, if we win on November
6th there will be a great deal of optimism about the future of this
country. We'll see capital come back, and we'll see—without actually
doing anything—we'll actually get a boost in the economy. If the
president gets reelected, I don't know what will happen. I can never
predict what the markets will do. Sometimes it does the exact opposite
of what I would have expected. But my own view is that if we get the—the
"Taxageddon," as they call it, January 1st, with this president, and
with a Congress that can't work together, it really is frightening,
really frightening in my view.
Audience member: Fifty-four percent of American voters think China's
economy is bigger than the US. When I first met you four or five years
ago, you did a diagram where you went very granular and you said, "Look,
guys"—this was a small group—and you said, "this is it, this is what it
is, tell it like it is." How are you going to win if 54 percent of the
voters think China's economy is bigger than ours? Or if it costs 4 cents
to make a penny and we keep making pennies? Canada got it right a month
ago. Why isn't someone saying, "Stop making pennies, round it to the
nearest nickel?" You know, that's an easy thing, compared to Iran. I
want to see you take the gloves off and talk to people that actually
read the paper and read the book and care about knowing the facts and
acknowledges power. As opposed to people who are swayed by, you know,
what sounds good at the moment. If you turned it into like, "Eat what
you kill," it'd be a landslide. In my humble opinion.
Romney: [Laughs.] Well, I wrote a book that lays out my view for what
has to happen in the country. And people who are fascinated by policy
will read the book. We have a website that lays out white papers on a
whole series of issues that I care about. I have to tell you, I don't
think this will have a significant impact on my electability. Um, I wish
it did. I think our ads will have a much bigger impact. I think the
debates will have a big impact. You know, I—
Audience member: No one even knows who Pete Peterson is and he's [unintelligible] trouble 20 years ago.
Romney: But that's my point. Which is—my dad used to say, "Being right
early is not good in politics." And in a setting like this—a highly
intellectual subject, a discussion of a whole series of important
topics—typically doesn't win elections. And there are, for instance,
this president won because of hope and change. All right? He won because
of hope and change.
Audience member: Keep the change. [Audience laughs.]
Romney: Yeah, well. So it's—I can tell you I have a very good team of
extraordinarily experienced, highly successful consultants. A couple of
people in particular who've done races around the world. I didn't
realize these guys in the US, the Karl Rove equivalents, they do races
all over the world. In Armenia. In Africa. In Israel. I mean, they work
for Bibi Netanyahu in his races. So they do his races and see which ads
work and which processes work best and, uh, we have ideas about what we
do over the course of the campaign. I'd tell them to you, but I'd have
to, you know, shoot ya. [Audience laughs.] Hopefully it will be a
successful place.
Audience member: I think one of the aspects about hope and change that
worked well for Obama four years ago was he promised to bring us more
honest, transparent governance in Washington. I've been around
politics—the first campaign I worked for was Barry Goldwater in 1964.
I've gotta be the oldest Republican in [unintelligible]. But from what
I've seen, particularly in the last seven months because of my own
personal involvement in an issue, is the government in Washington right
now is just permeated by cronyism, outright corruption. Our regulatory
agencies that are supposed to protect the public are protecting the
people that they're supposed to be regulating. And I think people are
fed up with that. Doesn't matter if you're in the tea party of Occupy
Wall Street, people see that the government is working for the powerful
interests and the people who well-connected politically and not the
common person. Which threatens that whole idea that we have this great
opportunity—which we should have and have had, historically—in the US
for anybody, from whatever background, to become successful. One way
that that becomes compromised is when the government is no longer seen
as being an honest agent. And where our tax dollars are not really being
put to work for us but for the people who are plugged-in politically.
You know, you had cases like Solyndra and [unintelligible] that I've
talked about and gotten involved in. You have Eric Holder who is
probably the most corrupt attorney general that we had ever in American
history. And I think it's something that if spun the right way in simple
terms can actually resonate with the American people. Obama did not
keep his promises. Nancy Pelosi was supposed to give us an honest
Congress and has given us just the opposite as speaker. And I think
that's a campaign issue that can work well. I'm optimistic that you'll
be elected president. And my recommendation would be clean house,
immediately. The SEC, the CFEC are disaster areas.
Romney: I wish they weren't unionized, so we could go a lot deeper than
you're actually allowed to go. Yeah. I can say this, which I'm sure
you'll agree with this as well. We speak with voters across the country
about their perceptions. Those people I told you, the 5 to 6 or 7
percent that we have to bring onto our side, they all voted for Barack
Obama four years ago. So, and by the way, when you say to them, "Do you
think Barack Obama is a failure?" they overwhelmingly say no. They like
him. But when you say, "Are you disappointed in his policies that
haven't worked?" they say yes. And because they voted for him, they
don't want to be told that they were wrong, that he's a bad guy, that he
did bad things, that he's corrupt. Those people that we that have to
get, they want to think they did the right thing but he just wasn't up
to the task. They love the phrase, "He's in over his head."
But we, you see, you and I, we spend our day with Republicans. We spend
our days with people who agree with us, and these people are people who
voted for him and don't agree with us. And so the things that animate us
are not the things that animate them. And the best success I have
speaking with those people is, you know, the president's been a
disappointment. He told you he'd keep unemployment below 8 percent,
hasn't been below 8 percent since. Fifty percent of kids coming out of
school can't get a job. Fifty percent. Fifty percent of the kids in high
school in our 50 largest cities won't graduate from high school. What
are they gonna do? They usually pass on saying…and I could say to that
audience that they nod their heads and say, "Yeah, I think you're
right." What's he going to do by the way is try and vilify me as someone
who's been successful. Or who's closed business or laid people off—an
evil, bad guy. And that may work. I actually think that right now people
are saying, "I want somebody who can make things better, that's gonna
motivate me, who can get jobs for my kids and get rising incomes." And I
hope to be able to be the one who wins that battle.
Audience member: I've seen Obama a lot of times on talk shows,
interviews, but I've never seen you on any of them. I think a lot of
people, especially you know, [unintelligible] I think people would see
you in a different light. I think a lot of women especially do not watch
debates. They don't come to these functions. You maybe have to show
your face more on TV and talk just like regular [unintelligible] typical
American last name.
Romney: Smith.
(Different) audience member: In Sweden, you say Johansson. [Audience laughs.]
Audience member: So I think maybe you could reach a lot of people.
Romney: Well, thank you. I have been on The View twice now. [Audience
laughs.] I've been on The View twice. It went very well. [Audience cross
talk.]
Romney: Regis is gone. I've done the night, the evening shows. I've been
on Letterman a couple of times. I've been on Leno more than a couple
times, and now Letterman hates me because I've been on Leno more than
him. They're very jealous of one another as you know. And there's, I was
asked to go on Saturday Night Live. I did not do that, in part because
you want to show that you're fun and you're a good person, but you also
want to be presidential. And Saturday Night Livehas the potential of
looking slapstick and not presidential. But The View is fine.
Although The View is high risk because of the five women on it, only one
is conservative. Four are sharp-tongued and not conservative, Whoopi
Goldberg in particular. Although last time I was on the show, she said
to me, "You know what? I think I could vote for you." And I said, "I
must have done something really wrong." [Audience laughs.] I had to sit
down and—oop, Darlene, you get the last word.
Audience member: I was just gonna say, I think a media strategy would be
sending Ann on the road. Because she, I think, is your best friend,
your best advocate. She connects so well. People talk so much about this
connect—and somebody said over there, people think he's a rich, rich
guy. Most of us know that you know that's—
Romney: You know that I'm as poor as a church mouse. [Audience laughter]
Audience member: We know that you value [unintelligible] and hard work.
And Ann really connects with people, and she can tell a story about the
hard work and she can tell about the person who [unintelligible] and go
on Good Morning America and go on The Viewand hold her own against these
people. And really get you the women connecting to you more. Seeing her
and think she's a great—
Romney: I think you're right. Absolutely right. We use Ann sparingly
right now, so that people don't tired of her, or start attacking.
Audience member: Who gets tired of Ann?
Romney: [Audience laughs.] I'll tell ya—. But you will see more of her
in the September, October timeframe. And you know we had, what's her
name, Hilary Rosen, who, you know, attacked her, and that made Ann much
more visible to the American people, which I think is very helpful. It
gave her a platform she wouldn't have had otherwise. And I agree with
you. I think she will be extraordinarily helpful.
Audience member: Just a quick—. Can you be a friend of her on Facebook
or whatever happened after Hilary Rosen [unintelligible]…That shows you
the value of social networking and just how important the media can be
in this election cycle, and I just think that she is amazing. And I know
she wants, she wants [unintelligible]…
Romney: She's out there. She's, she's in Texas tonight. She was in
Louisiana last night. She's raising money in those places. She was at
Ben Crenshaw's house for dinner today, tonight. [Unintelligible.] So
there are some benefits. One of the benefits I get is eating the world's
best dessert, which I will. [Audience laughs.] Thank you. [Applause.]
7 Highlights You Missed From the Romn
y Video http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2012/09/7-highlights-romney-secret-fundraising-video via @motherjones
http://tl.gd/jc4nju

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