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Christian
Science Monitor...
Paul Ryan: GOP
primary should not be ‘personality contest’
Rep. Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin said Thursday that the GOP needs an
election that carries a mandate. In Ryan’s view, Mitt Romney has
offered a positive agenda for fixing the nation.
By Dave Cook, staff writer
February 16, 2012
WASHINGTON - House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin
said that given the nation’s tough fiscal situation presidential
candidate Mitt Romney should offer voters a “positive agenda” for how
to fix the nation’s problems – and that Mr. Romney has done just that.
Speaking at a Monitor-hosted breakfast for reporters Thursday,
Representative Ryan said, “We just can’t have an ordinary election
where it is a personality contest and then you win by default and don’t
have a mandate. We need to have an election with a mandate so we can
actually fix these problems.”
Ryan, one of most influential Republicans in the US House of
Representatives, charged that in 2008 President Obama ran, “what I
would say was a vague platitude campaign – hope and change. And then he
gave us all stuff he did with the Pelosi Congress.”
In Ryan’s view, Romney “is stepping into the groove” of offering voters
a concrete, positive agenda for fixing the nation. Ryan cited Romney’s
speech on Feb. 10 to the Conservative Political Action Conference
(CPAC) where the former Massachusetts governor talked about his
conservative bona fides saying, “I know conservatism because I have
lived conservatism,” adding that he “fought against long odds in
a deep blue state.”
Ryan also cited a Romney speech about entitlements delivered Dec. 20 in
New Hampshire where offered a contrast between an “entitlement society”
versus his preferred “opportunity society.”
Speeches outlining detailed plans are important, Ryan said, because,
“you’ve got to prepare the country” for the specifics of what you
intend to do if elected. If you withhold information because you don’t
want to take the risk of speaking boldly, “you win the wrong kind of
victory,” he said.
Read this and other articles at the Christian Science Monitor
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