Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?



To: Sam who wrote (190061)5/30/2012 6:25:51 PM
From: SamRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 224829
 
A three-year minimum?

By Steve Benen
-
Wed May 30, 2012 4:30 PM EDT

Campaigning in Las Vegas yesterday, Mitt Romney shared an odd anecdote about presidential requirements. I'm still not sure if he was kidding.

The Republican referenced a suggestion from a voter he met recently, who wanted to see a constitutional requirement that presidential candidates "spend at least three years working in business before he could become president of the United States."

Romney didn't explicitly endorse the idea, but he seemed fond of the suggestion, telling his audience, "You see, then he or she would understand that the policies they're putting in place have to encourage small business, make it easier for business to grow."

If Romney's serious about this, it's worth appreciating what we know about history -- plenty of well-regarded modern presidents (Clinton, Reagan, JFK, Eisenhower, and both Roosevelts) were not businessmen before taking office. George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter were successful in business, but far less so in office.

Similarly, U.S. News noted that the three men "widely considered by historians to be the worst presidents of the modern era [are] Warren G. Harding, Herbert Hoover, and George W. Bush." All three "were successful businessmen."

I'm not suggesting there's a causal relationship here, but the point is it's foolish to assume that good businessmen make good presidents when there's so much evidence to the contrary.

Daniel Akst, a columnist for Newsday, consulted with Barbara Perry, a senior fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center, to determine the employment background of every president. His conclusion: "It's important to know whether a president has worked in business. It's important because having worked in business is associated with being a lousy president, at least in the modern era."

I don't imagine many voters are aware of the historical record at this level of detail, but for those who care about the facts, Romney's new talking point doesn't make a lot of sense.

maddowblog.msnbc.msn.com 



To: Sam who wrote (190061)5/30/2012 10:52:01 PM
From: Win SmithRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 224829
 
The amusing thing is that while Fox itself might be being in a mildly apologetic mode- they've apparently pulled the video from their web site and somewhat mildly disavowed it- the mildless hoards on the right were right on top of the NYT story at least, making the usual "you're just as bad" idiotic accusation. They got 3 of the 1st 4 comments in against the Times story, anyway. From mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com  this aparrent Fox statement:



The blog TVNewser quoted a statement it said was from Bill Shine, the executive vice president of programming for Fox News: “The package that aired on ‘Fox & Friends’ was created by an associate producer and was not authorized at the senior executive level of the network. This has been addressed with the show’s producers.”
But from the reliably mindless rabble, we have this thrilling little piece of incoherence:
J.San RamonFLAGWow. All that and no mention of whether the content of the "ad", " political spot", "news content" was true or not. What a master magic trick of deception this article is.Turns out the content was all true people. Obama made a bunch of campaign promises and sorta the opposite happened.Remember Hope and Change. Not much change and guess what he spent....sit down for this....he spent $5 Trillion we need to pay back....all for "no change". You can actually get the same old numbers, the same old employment, the same old economy for free.$5 Trillion. The whole Iraq War only cost $1 Trillion. The USA total annual income is less than $2 Trillion. Obama spent that every year plus another 5....the is FIVE big ones.


Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.