In short, Romney’s plan would incinerate the very safety net that he claims to be his excuse for expressing no interest in addressing the needs of the “very poor.” Oh, and how poor are the poorest 5% or 10% of Americans he seemed to be referring to, exactly? Even the census, which tracks household income for all Americans, doesn’t say with precision, although it does note that households with annual income of $15,000 or less made up 13.7% of our population in 2010. I don’t know about you, but I’m concerned about them.
If Romney’s lack of concern about the very poor came with a real plan indeed to fix a tattered safety net so that poverty rates could begin to decrease, he might be less vulnerable to the charge of being out of touch with voters. But as long as his gaffes and policy prescriptions continue to belie either a lack of understanding of the economic plight of Americans or a cynical political calculation that both ignores and will exacerbate that plight, Romney will go the way of his fellow “oops”-prone 2012 presidential candidate.
(Source: azspot)