In new role, Ryan faces Obama in Iowa

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Monday, Aug. 13, 2012
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Romney selects Ryan



Click here to view a special section on Paul Ryan, selected to be Republican candidate Mitt Romney's running mate in the 2012 presidential campaign.

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President Barack Obama glances back as he walks through his Hyde Park neighborhood to a campaign event, Sunday, Aug. 12, 2012, in Chicago.

President Barack Obama glances back as he walks through his Hyde Park neighborhood to a campaign event, Sunday, Aug. 12, 2012, in Chicago.

— Newly tapped Republican vice presidential contender Paul Ryan is facing off against President Barack Obama as the front lines in the battle for the White House shift to Iowa.

While Mitt Romney continues a Florida bus tour, Ryan will meet voters at the Iowa State Fair, campaigning alone for the first time in the same state where Obama launches a bus tour of his own. Monday’s events may help determine whether conservative excitement for the Wisconsin congressman — and his controversial budget plans — will overshadow Romney’s own economic message.

Democrats are banking on it.

Since Romney formally named Ryan his running mate on Saturday, the Obama campaign has been attacking the Republican budget architect’s plans to transform Medicare into a voucher system and re-shape the nation’s tax system. That effort will continue as Obama kicks off a three-day bus tour across Iowa, making his longest visit to a single state yet as he seeks to fire up supporters who put him on the path to the presidency in 2008.

A top Obama political adviser, David Axelrod, said Monday that Romney’s selection of Ryan is reminiscent of John McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin four years ago. He told “CBS This Morning” he remembers the initial excitement surrounding Palin’s selection, but says he doesn’t believe the choice of Ryan “is going to be a plus for Mr. Romney.”

Axelrod called Ryan “a genial fellow” who advocates harsh policy positions, particularly on Medicare.

Ryan figures to play prominently in Obama’s message.

Attending campaign fundraisers in Chicago Sunday, the president tagged Ryan as the “ideological leader” of the Republican Party.

“He is a decent man, he is a family man, he is an articulate spokesman for Governor Romney’s vision, but it is a vision that I fundamentally disagree with,” Obama said Sunday in his first public comments about Ryan’s selection.

Looking to define the Republican ticket’s views on Medicare, the Obama campaign released an online video Monday featuring seniors in Florida talking about how Ryan’s proposed changes to the popular health-care program could affect them.

“It doesn’t make any sense to cut Medicare,” says one woman. The video aims to portray the Romney-Ryan ticket as a threat to Medicare and Obama as its protector.

Romney tried to distance himself from his running mate’s budget plan, making clear that his ideas rule, not Ryan’s.

“I have my budget plan,” Romney said, “And that’s the budget plan we’re going to run on.”

He walked a careful line as he campaigned with Ryan, a tea party favorite, by his side in North Carolina and Wisconsin, singling out his running mate’s work “to make sure we can save Medicare.” But the presidential candidate never said whether he embraced Ryan’s austere plan himself.

The pair faced an estimated 10,000 supporters in Wisconsin as Ryan returned Sunday to his home state for the first time in his new role.

“Hi mom,” Ryan said, voice crackling, as he took the stage and looked out over a sprawling crowd.

An enthusiastic Romney seemed to feed off the energy.

“If you follow the campaign of Barack Obama, he’s going to do everything in his power to make this the lowest, meanest, negative campaign in history. We’re not going to let that happen. This is going to be a campaign about ideas, about the future of America,” Romney said. “Mr. President, take your campaign out of the gutter. Let’s talk about the real issues that America faces.”

But Romney was reluctant to discuss in detail the plans Ryan crafted as chairman of the House Budget Committee.

The 42-year-old congressman proposed reshaping Medicare, the long-standing entitlement, by setting up a voucher-like system to let future retirees shop for private health coverage or choose the traditional program — a plan that independent budget analysts say would probably mean higher out-of-pocket costs for seniors.

Romney and Ryan, in their first joint television interview Sunday, were clearly mindful that some of Ryan’s proposals don’t sit well with key constituencies, among them seniors in critical states like Florida and Ohio.

Romney did not bring Ryan with him to the Sunshine State. The congressman’s first stop there is expected next weekend, according to the campaign. Instead, Romney devoted Ryan’s first solo swing to Iowa, a swing state Obama won convincingly four years ago.

Polls suggest the race will be closer this time.

While Ryan was expected to visit the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Obama’s bus tour will begin in Council Bluffs, just across the Missouri River from Omaha, Neb., and heading across the state before wrapping up in Davenport along the Mississippi River.

Romney, meanwhile, will be more than 1,000 miles away. The Republican presidential candidate has Florida events scheduled for St. Augustine and Miami.

Obama will showcase the powers of incumbency as he tours a farm in Missouri Valley, Iowa, and discuss ways of addressing a devastating drought afflicting a wide swath of the country. White House officials said the president planned to direct his Agriculture Department to buy up to $170 million worth of meat and poultry to provide relief to farmers and ranchers.

The Defense Department, a large purchaser of beef, pork and lamb, was expected to look for ways to encourage its vendors to speed up purchases of meat.

Obama has urged Congress to pass a farm bill to provide a long-term solution for farmers, a point he was expected to make in Iowa, whose economy is heavily dependent on agriculture.

The president’s bus tour was reminiscent of his Iowa caucus campaign four years ago, when he spent weeks mining for votes across the state. First lady Michelle Obama was expected to join the president for events in Dubuque and Davenport on Wednesday.

reader COMMENTS
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(17)
why_think
Aug 14, 2012 at 9:44 a.m.
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wislady, did Fox tell you that?
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"""“There’s only one president that I know of in history that robbed Medicare — $716 billion to pay for a new risky program of his own that we call Obamacare,” Romney said in a CBS interview Sunday evening.

The claim is central to Romney’s strategy of deflecting attacks on his vice presidential pick’s plan to remake Medicare. But it papers over important facts, one of which is Ryan’s budget blueprints — which Republicans overwhelmingly voted for in 2011 and 2012 — include the same cuts he’s slamming.

The Medicare cuts, passed in the Affordable Care Act, come in the form of reimbursement reductions to hospitals, Medicaid prescription drugs and private insurance plans under Medicare Advantage. The Congressional Budget Office projects that they’ll extend the solvency of Medicare by eight years."""
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THERE IS MORE...
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"""Ryan’s plan under the Path To Prosperity would end Medicare as an insurance program that directly pays medical bills for the elderly. It would be replaced with a fixed subsidy which seniors may use to buy competing private and public insurance policies on an exchange. If the value of the subsidy does not keep up with the growth of health care costs, seniors would make up the cost and pay higher medical bills.

The Congressional Budget Office projects that Ryan’s plan would raise seniors’ out-of-pocket expenses by $6,500 per year."""
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So Ryan makes the EXACT SAME CUTS that the Romney Ryan team is ripping President Obama for. Yep, wislady, failed to find the facts, AGAIN!
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wislady
Aug 14, 2012 at 7:19 a.m.
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Maybe the Obama campaign should be honest with the seniors. Obamacare slashes payments to doctors seeing medicare patient by 31% on JAN 1. Good luck finding a doctor who accepts new medicare patients after Jan 1.
Also, slashing medicare by over 700 Billion to fund his Obamacare, cuts healthcare to seniors.

How about some truth and facts for the American people who pay all the taxes?

LibertyBelle
Aug 14, 2012 at 6:30 a.m.
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Yesterday in Iowa, Obama said "Tell Ryan to sign the Farm Bill so you get some relief out here". Reality: The House signed the Bill two weeks ago. The measure passed 223 to 197, it went to the Senate, and there it sits while they all went on vacation! Obama doesn't spend enough time in Washington, to know what's going on.idiot

Midnight_Ride
Aug 13, 2012 at 6:32 p.m.
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Curious why the left wing media never mentions the Ryan budget was co-authored with Democrat Sen. Ron Wyden and takes many ideas from Bill Clinton’s plan.
...Why did 60 minutes cut Ryan telling the public his own mother is receiving Medicare and S.S and this won't affect anyone 55 or over? And the reforms are to save it for my generation and his.
...It's dazzling the lengths the left go to deceive the American public.

Maynard
Aug 13, 2012 at 6:03 p.m.
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Oblamer, are you saying that if the people want the promised chicken in every pot, they will have to raise their own ??? Would be nice if those truly not in need would get off the government dole. Saw on the national news tonight Paul Ryan trying to give a speech today in Iowa and the stage being rushed by protestors. Pretty Pathetic. He who shouts the loudest, ignores rules the most, runs the most negative ads, is supposed to be the winner ??? Seems to be the thinking of the present political system. The far left actions are just as shameful as some in the fringe element of the Tea Party. IMO

wasp2491
Aug 13, 2012 at 3:32 p.m.
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Some key words being ignored I think. Credible? We have difference of opinion on that. Cutting entitlements, which ones how much? Social security & Medicare are on the line.

wasp2491
Aug 13, 2012 at 3:19 p.m.
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Now just who's budget do you think they are going to talk about? Rmoney has never been specific about a anything concerning a budget.

Shrek
Aug 13, 2012 at 3:18 p.m.
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Actually a number of "credible" economists have endorsed Paul Ryan's budget blueprint. Thomas Sowell being probably the most well known and "credible"
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How many years will it be before the budget is balanced in the Senate's spending plan? Oh, that's right, it has been three years and they refuse to submit a spending plan. How long should it take to balance the budget? Do you have any idea what our unfunded liabilities are?

wasp2491
Aug 13, 2012 at 2:10 p.m.
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No credible economist sees ryans budget as viable without cutting entitlements to the bone. Including social security and medicare. The Bishops of his own church said his budget didn't follow his church's teaching. Then the budget wouldn't be balanced for thirty years. Remember this guy is not an economist he is an accountant, big difference. His accomplishments so far as a congressman have been stellar though. A bill changing a post office name and a tax break for archery equipment and fluffing his resume. Pretty impressive stuff I'd say.

whz_bng
Aug 13, 2012 at 10:12 a.m.
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They need to run on Obama's record. The dems will not bring up Obama's reign of failure.

RetiredAirForce
Aug 13, 2012 at 9:47 a.m.
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I love this tag line that a non-biased AP uses, "his controversial budget plans".

Since our nation has been without a national budget for over 3 years, house and senate voted down this presidents plan, it is essential we have one. Glaringly the one labeled as controversial had bipartisan support/votes while the presidents had 100% bipartisan rejection.

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