Romney turning focus to domestic energy production and trade
Sep 24 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Seema Mehta Los
Angeles Times
Mitt Romneywill try to regain his footing in the presidential
campaign this week by highlighting specific proposals that he
hopes will be an affirmative argument for his candidacy,
focusing first on energy and trade policy.
Among the policies Romney plans to push is protecting
American intellectual property rights from what he has
repeatedly referred to as "cheaters in China," crafting
agreements to increase international trade, approving the
Keystone XL oil pipeline and renewing a push for drilling in the
Gulf of Mexico. The goal: to convince Americans that they would
fare better economically under his presidency.
The proposals are not new, but the campaign's decision to
draw attention to them reflects a shift for a candidate who has
been criticized for focusing too much on denigrating President
Obama and not enough on telling voters what a Romney presidency
would mean.
"Voters will get to know more not only about the specifics of
the Romney plan, but how it will benefit them," senior advisor
Ed Gillespie wrote in a memo to reporters released Monday. "A
real recovery will improve the quality of life for working
Americans and lift millions out of poverty by making jobs
available again."
Romney has been dogged in recent days by challenges -- the
release of a secretly recorded video of him making controversial
remarks about supporters of President Obama, internal strife in
the campaign, troubling polls in battleground states, questions
among the chattering class about the relatively slow pace of his
campaign, and concern among conservative allies that his bid is
faltering.
The Republican nominee addressed some of these concerns when
he spoke to reporters aboard his campaign plane on Sunday,
saying that his focus on fundraising was driven by the need to
compete financially with Obama. He said that he would spend less
time raising money, presumably meaning he would spend more time
rallying supporters and wooing the undecided in battleground
states.
"The fundraising season is probably a little quieter going
forward," Romney said.
His schedule shows hints of an increased pace -- on Sunday
night, Romney held a tele-town-hall with Iowa voters, and he had
a rally in Denver. On Monday, Romney is scheduled to hold a
rally in Pueblo, Colo., and on Tuesday, after public appearances
in New York, he will start a two-day bus tour of Ohio. Romney
may appear in Virginia on Thursday. All are states that are
critical in his bid for the White House.
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seema.mehta@latimes.com
Twitter: @LATSeema