TPM
In the final days of the 2012 race, Mitt Romney’s campaign is really making good on its pollster’s August promise
to ignore fact checkers. To close the deal in the Ohio, Team Romney is
blitzing the state with a series of wildly deceptive statements and ads
suggesting that Chrysler is moving local jobs to China.
The latest is an unannounced radio spot, audio of which was posted by the Greg Sargent on Tuesday. The spot asks whether Obama rescued the auto industry for “Ohio — or China?”
“Now comes word that Chrysler plans to start making Jeeps in — you
guessed it — China,” the ad’s narrator says. “What happened to the
promises made to autoworkers in Toledo and throughout Ohio — the same
hard-working men and women who were told that Obama’s auto bailout would
help them?”
The radio spot is a supercharged version of an earlier television ad, also unannounced, that drew unusually widespread condemnation
in the local and national press for tying a planned expansion of Jeep
operations in China to the fate of Jeep workers in Ohio. And that ad
jumped off similar statements Romney made earlier while campaigning in
Ohio.
Chrysler, Jeep’s parent company, has publicly condemned Romney’s claims as false,
writing on its website that they have “no intention of shifting
production of its Jeep models out of North America to China” and that
any expansion in Asia is to serve Asian markets. In fact, they are adding over 1,000 jobs to their Toledo factory as part of a $500 million investment in upgrading its capacity.
After Romney continued to suggest otherwise in ads, Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne personally called him out for “inaccurate” claims.
“Jeep is one of our truly global brands with uniquely American roots.
This will never change. So much so that we committed that the iconic
Wrangler nameplate, currently produced in our Toledo, Ohio plant, will
never see full production outside the United States,” Marchionne said on
Tuesday. “Jeep assembly lines will remain in operation in the United
States and will constitute the backbone of the brand.”
GM didn’t take well to the ad either, bristling at the notion that
the auto rescue — which the Center for Automotive research estimated
saved 1 million US jobs — encouraged outsourcing.
“We’ve clearly entered some parallel universe during these last few days,” GM spokesman Greg Martin told the Detroit Free Press.
“No amount of campaign politics at its cynical worst will diminish our
record of creating jobs in the U.S. and repatriating profits back to
this country.”
Detroit News reporter David Sherpardson reported some more choice words
from GM over the ad, quoting a representative who said “At this stage,
we’re looking at a Hubble telescope-length distances between campaign
ads and reality….GM’s creating jobs in the US and repatriating profits
back to this country should be a source of bipartisan pride.”
Things have been getting dicy in the fact check department in general this week in Ohio. In addition to Romney’s repeated claim
that he’d have saved the auto industry largely with private funds, a
scenario experts say would have been impossible during the financial
crisis, one of his top surrogates suggested on Monday that a Romney
administration would have little effect on abortion laws. Romney
supporter Norm Coleman told a Jewish group in the state on Monday that
Roe v. Wade would never be reversed under Romney, despite Romney’s frequent criticism of the decision.
In a blast from the past, the Romney campaign is also reviving ads (unannounced, yet again) that feature a debunked claim
that Obama “gutted” welfare work requirements. Romney’s original
welfare attack in the summer was savaged in the press as inaccurate,
prompting Romney’s pollster Neil Newhouse to respond that “we’re not going to let our campaign be dictated by fact checkers.”
The Obama campaign, which has its own ad out
countering Romney’s in the state, has tried to suggest that the
campaign’s dismissiveness towards fact checks suggests they’re behind in
the state and getting desperate. The Romney campaign insists that the
race is a toss up and that they’re expanding the electoral map elsewhere
to places like Pennsylvania and Minnesota as well.
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