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Romney, Perry Go After Each Other in GOP Debate

September 23, 2011 RSS Feed Print

ORLANDO, Fla. — Side by side in confrontational debate, Republican presidential hopefuls Mitt Romney and Rick Perry sarcastically accused each other Thursday night of flip-flopping on Social Security and health care, flashpoints in their intense struggle for the party nomination.

In a debate that focused on character and credibility as much as other issues, Perry insisted he had backed off "not one inch, Sir" from what he had written in a campaign-season book published a few months ago.

[Who's In and Out of the 2012 GOP Race?]

Romney vouched for his own steadfastness moments later. "There are a lot of reasons not to elect me," he said. "There are a lot of reasons not to elect other people on this stage. ... But one reason to elect me is I know what I stand for. I've written it down. Words have meaning."

The two men assailed one another in the third debate in as many weeks in a race for the Republican presidential nomination growing testier by the day.

Perry runs ahead in national opinion polls, with Romney a close second, and they compete daily for endorsements from members of Congress and other party luminaries in hopes of gaining a permanent edge before the caucuses and primaries begin early next year.

The other contenders on the stage struggled at times to gain the debate spotlight, even as they struggle to gain traction in the polls.

The GOP presidential hopefuls all agreed quickly on one point — that President Barack Obama's handling of the economy was woeful. They said they would cut taxes, eliminate government regulations and take other steps to help create jobs in a nation with 9.1 percent unemployment.

Yet the two-hour event was marked by clashes over Social Security, health care, immigration, gun rights and more.

Romney accused Perry of having said the federal government "shouldn't be in the pension business, that it's unconstitutional," a reference to Social Security benefits.

Noting his rival's denials, Romney mocked him. "You better find that Rick Perry and get him to stop saying that," he said.

[Political Cartoons on the GOP Hopefuls]

Perry soon returned the favor, saying that Romney switched his position on health care between editions of a book he had published. In one edition, Perry said, Romney advocated expanding to the rest of the country the health care program he signed in Massachusetts. "Then in your paperback you took that line out, so speaking of not getting it straight in your book, Sir."

"It's like badminton," said Perry.

The Massachusetts legislation required residents of the state to purchase health coverage or pay a fine, a cornerstone of the law that Obama won from Congress last year that has inflamed conservative voters across the country.

Perry also accused Romney of flip-flopping his views on the rights of gun owners.

In fact, both Perry and Romney have sought to blur if not rewrite portions of their own records as they vie for the nomination.

In Romney's case, that has meant trying to win support from conservative voters despite the moderate positions he held on social issues while he was governor of Massachusetts.

And for Perry, it has meant trying to fend off criticism that his views on Social Security and other issues render him unelectable.

Perry gave no ground on one issue — his support for a state law in Texas that gives the children of illegal immigrants reduced tuition to state colleges and universities.

[Photos: Republicans on the Campaign Trail]

"If you say that we should not educate children who have come into the state for no other reason than they've been brought there, by no fault of their own, I don't think you have a heart," he said.

That drew a retort from former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum. "No one is suggesting that students who are illegal in this country shouldn't go to colleges and universities," he said, adding that he objects to giving them state subsidies to do so.

Tags:
Rick Santorum,
Jon Huntsman,
Gary Johnson,
Michele Bachmann,
Herman Cain,
Rick Perry,
Republican Party,
Associated Press,
Ron Paul,
2012 presidential election,
Barack Obama,
Mitt Romney

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Flip flopping on Health Care. Gaining positive experiences, while defying the logic of both the undeveloped children facing possible re-incarnation by a loving and concerned mother as well as guaranteeing G.I benefits to those Proud American servicemen is a sick argument to address.

The British and Canadian governments have TEA BAGGED us a whole bunch lately, not only with wordmanship but also with the advancement of admiration towards the declining polarity our continents are holding. As AIDS and Down Syndrome have created a mass marketing appeal towards HOW SEX SELLS, the televised unity of continual progress has evolved also. DISNEY CHANNELS' Mickey Mouse show appears to be a lava lamp, with 3-D effects to it.

Danton of CA 2:16PM September 26, 2011

Look like there's a reason why they couldn't go after Sarah Palin in this debate.

http://PalinsDirtyLittleSecret.blogspot.com/

dana jones of FL 10:39AM September 23, 2011

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