What is the difference between romney and santorum
Santorum's policies echo this philosophy. He's proposing cutting the corporate tax to 17 percent from 35 percent, and slashing corporate taxes for manufacturers to zero, a move he says will help bring back blue collar jobs. He barely mentions the labor unions that helped keep those jobs well-paying. It's another contrast with Romney, who says Santorum is "picking winners and losers" in an economy where the vast majority of jobs are in other sectors. The former Massachusetts governor hosts many of his events at small business and local factories, where he'll often tour the facility with the company's owner, founder or CEO before speaking with a group of the company's workers — and a bank of local TV cameras.
His campaign consultants call them "messaging events. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Politics Covid U. News World Opinion Business. Share this —.
Follow NBC News. By NBC Politics. NBC Politics. Santorum and Gingrich are competing for conservative support against the more moderate Romney, and Santorum told WLS radio Monday that Gingrich "has just taken the conservative vote and divided it. Romney kicked off his Monday campaigning in Springfield, saying at a pancake breakfast that he has the economic gravitas to bring growth and job creation, unlike an "economic lightweight" like President Barack Obama.
He didn't mention Santorum by name, but his rhetoric was the same as weekend criticism that also characterized his main foe as an economic lightweight. Later, Romney used a speech at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy, where Obama once served on the advisory board, to depict the presidential contest as a battle with Obama over the economy. Romney made no mention of his GOP foes, instead focusing on what he called Obama's "assault on freedom" through stifling business regulations and high taxes.
This election will be about principle. Our economic freedom will be on the ballot. And I intend to offer the American people a clear choice. According to Romney, Obama's "heavy hand" has cast a pall of uncertainty over the economy, preventing entrepreneurs from investing or starting small businesses.
Inventors such as Thomas Edison, the Wright brothers and Steve Jobs would have never have succeeded in the current economy, Romney claimed. Santorum later mocked Romney for promoting "freedom" while also having passed a health insurance mandate in Massachusetts. They also challenged Romney's repeated claim that the regulatory climate is slowing economic production, with Princeton economics professor Cecilia Rouse -- a former member of the president's Council of Economic Advisers -- saying there was "not actually any evidence that regulatory burden actually has a meaningful impact on employment or the economy now.
Romney has argued that his plan was a solution to a Massachusetts problem, not an effort by the federal government to apply a one-size-fits-all program across the country. Santorum is waging an uphill campaign battle against Romney, who has more than twice as many delegates to the nominating convention as Santorum in the Republican race to pick a challenger to Obama in the November 6 general election. Santorum, a staunch social conservative, has tried to rally conservatives who still harbor doubts about Romney because of the healthcare plan and other more moderate stances he took while governor of liberal Massachusetts.
In San Antonio, Santorum seemed to imply that voters might as well stick with Obama rather than switch to Romney.
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