OK, first debate over. No getting around it, Romney did a terrific job. He looked and sounded calm and confident. President Obama, while a great orator, is not always a terrific debater but last night was poor. Wish I could say otherwise!
However, Mitt's facts' did not meet the level of his performance. As he himself told the President, "you aren't entitled to your own facts". So here's a review of a few of the claims made in last nights debate. I highly recommend factcheck.org for any political claims or ads you want to verify. They are terrific.
Medicare
Claim: Romney said Obama's health
care law cuts $716 billion from Medicare which will hurt current beneficiaries.
Facts: This has been one of
Romney's favorite lines of attack, but his claim that Obama's health care law
cuts $716 billion in benefits for current Medicare beneficiaries is not true. The health care law will
limit payments to health care providers and insurers — not senior citizens'
benefits — as part of an effort to rein in costs over the course of the next
decade. The fact is, the money isn’t being taken away from Medicare. Instead,
Medicare would spend it, but over a longer period of time than was expected
before the health care law. The law extends the solvency of the Medicare Part A
trust fund.
HealthCare
Board
Romney claimed a new board established by the
Affordable Care Act is “going to tell people ultimately what kind of treatments
they can have.” Not true. The board is a 15-member
panel that’s tasked with finding ways to slow the growth of Medicare spending.
So, its work concerns Medicare, not everyone seeking health care. The board only recommends cost-saving measures
for Medicare, and is legally forbidden to ration care or reduce benefits.
Tax cuts
Claim:
Obama says Romney's tax plan would cut taxes by $5 trillion over 10 years,
inflating the deficit.
Facts:
Romney said his plan will be paid for by curtailing tax deductions, Romney has
declined to say what tax deductions he would end. The non-partisan Tax Policy
Center has contended that middle-class families would see taxes rise about
$2,000 a year under Romney's plan if he keeps his promise to make the tax
reform revenue-neutral, arguing that it can't be done without ending popular
middle-class deductions on mortgage interest and charitable contributions.
Private-sector job gains
Claim: Obama said the U.S.
economy has created 5 million private-sector jobs the past 30 months.
Facts: After the economy
plummeted in late 2007 and throughout 2009, the United States has gained 4.6
million private-sector jobs since the labor market bottomed in February 2010 —
or 5.1 million under preliminary revisions released last week that are not part
of the official tally by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Clean
energy
Claim: Romney said clean energy interests got $90 billion in tax breaks under Obama, and that half of those companies receiving breaks went out of business.
Facts: The president's 2009 stimulus bill included a combination of over $90 billion in spending, financing and tax breaks for clean energy investments, but it's false that half of the companies went broke. Some of the Energy Department's loans went to firms that failed, but Romney's claim that half of the companies went broke is inaccurate. In a 2011 story, USA TODAY reported that the stocks of many of 45 publicly traded companies receiving stimulus funds had outperformed the stock market, despite Solyndra and other, smaller failures. The money, mostly in loans and loan guarantees, are helping build factories for companies such as Ford, Nissan and Tesla Motor. One beneficiary is health care technology company Athenahealth, whose shares have more than doubled. Its CEO, Jonathan Bush, is a first cousin of President George W. Bush.
Claim: Romney said clean energy interests got $90 billion in tax breaks under Obama, and that half of those companies receiving breaks went out of business.
Facts: The president's 2009 stimulus bill included a combination of over $90 billion in spending, financing and tax breaks for clean energy investments, but it's false that half of the companies went broke. Some of the Energy Department's loans went to firms that failed, but Romney's claim that half of the companies went broke is inaccurate. In a 2011 story, USA TODAY reported that the stocks of many of 45 publicly traded companies receiving stimulus funds had outperformed the stock market, despite Solyndra and other, smaller failures. The money, mostly in loans and loan guarantees, are helping build factories for companies such as Ford, Nissan and Tesla Motor. One beneficiary is health care technology company Athenahealth, whose shares have more than doubled. Its CEO, Jonathan Bush, is a first cousin of President George W. Bush.
Rising
health care costs
Claim: Health care costs have risen $2,500 per family per year under Obama.
Facts: Partly true, but health care inflation has slowed notably under Obama. Health insurance costs rose 4% last year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. That rate is far below the 10% to 13% seen in 2003 and 2004
Claim: Health care costs have risen $2,500 per family per year under Obama.
Facts: Partly true, but health care inflation has slowed notably under Obama. Health insurance costs rose 4% last year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. That rate is far below the 10% to 13% seen in 2003 and 2004
Deficit
It’s not true that Obama “doubled” the deficit.
He inherited a $1.2 trillion deficit and deficits have remained at or above
that level, as Romney said, every year since then.