Oct 30, 201209:27 AMLeft Business Brain
with Tom Breuer
2 reasons why Mitt Romney’s business experience means squat
(page 1 of 2)
1. Herbert Hoover. 2. George W. Bush.
You didn’t think I’d bury the lead, did you? Now, I suppose I could have ended this blog post right there. Maybe link Hoover’s name to a picture of hobos lining up for soup and bread and Bush’s to a video of Charles Koch’s Croatian manservant beating an orphan to death with an ivory serving spoon manufactured overseas by somewhat less fortunate orphans. (Oh, you know that exists somewhere.) But it’s more fun – and more irritating to Republicans – to pile on.
It’s become an article of faith among GOPsters that business experience is not just an advantage when it comes to governing but should be something of a prerequisite. Mitt Romney has seized on both these fallacies, claiming that he is uniquely qualified to steer our economy back on course and that anyone whose mettle has not been forged in the crucible of free-market capitalism simply can’t get the job done.
Amazingly, Romney has even hinted that business experience should be one of the qualifications for office spelled out in the Constitution – along with a minimum age and the ability to fool everyone but Donald Trump into believing that you weren’t born in a yurt on a Kenyan socialist re-education farm:
“I was speaking with one of these business owners who owns a couple of restaurants in town,” said Romney at a campaign rally in May. “And he said, ‘You know I’d like to change the Constitution, I’m not sure I can do it,’ he said. ‘I’d like to have a provision in the Constitution that in addition to the age of the president and the citizenship of the president and the birthplace of the president being set by the Constitution, I’d like it also to say that the president has to spend at least three years working in business before he could become president of the United States.’ 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.”
Of course, such a provision would have eliminated Abraham Lincoln, Dwight Eisenhower, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, John Kennedy, Bill Clinton, and even Ronald Reagan, the career actor.
Among those who would have come to office with sterling credentials?
Herbert Hoover, who presided over his own engineering firm and the start of the Great Depression. Jimmy Carter, who ran his family’s peanut farm. George H.W. Bush, a career oil man. And, of course, George W. Bush, entrepreneur and, more recently, inventor of the invisibility cloak and amnesia ray.
Of course, like a lot of persistent Republican myths (e.g., that high taxes on the wealthy kill jobs and the economy or that Newt Gingrich doesn’t want to eat your children), this one just won’t die. Now, you can forgive people for forgetting about Hoover, but just 12 short years ago, George W. Bush ran a campaign that was eerily similar to Romney’s, saying that his business experience made him the ideal choice to guide the economy into the new millennium.
In fact, Bush – who, like Romney, came from a wealthy, politically connected family – once said while campaigning against Al Gore, “I understand small business growth. I was one.” (America, you have no one to blame but yourselves.)


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Tom Breuer, IB Web editor, has spent much of his life trying to explain his leftward leanings – sometimes succeeding, sometimes failing. He's used to being surrounded and ganged up on, so he welcomes comments from conservatives. He is the co-author of three political humor books, including Sweet Jesus, I Hate Bill O'Reilly.
1) Ann Coulter is right
2) Ppl in Madison need to get out of the city more. It's soooooo one sided here - sad.
and of course the "Moderator" has to approve my posts. Kind of like ABC's standards committee - who knew they had one?