Go Home

Martin O'Malley

8 documents found in 0.001 seconds.

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (142)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (832)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Fox News host Chris Wallace on Sunday agreed with GOP hopeful Mitt Romney's claim during last week's presidential debate that the Republican nominee had not proposed a $5 trillion tax cut.

"I don’t have a $5 trillion tax cut," Romney had said on Wednesday. "I don’t have a tax cut of a scale that you’re talking about."

"Both sides since the debate have been saying that the other candidate is lying about his position," Wallace told Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) on Sunday. "The president keeps saying that Mitt Romney is proposing a $5 trillion tax cut. That's not true."

"Wait a minute here," O'Malley replied. "Former Gov. Romney is proposing a 20 percent cut to income taxes, including income taxes for the wealthiest Americans. And I believe a 30 percent cut for corporate income taxes, including for people like big oil that are socking all of us at the pump right now. Any economist can debate whether that adds up to $4.9 trillion or does it add up to $5 trillion? But the fact of the matter is in this debate, we saw Big Bird meet the big lie."

Wallace argued that O'Malley was "mischaracterizing" Romney's plan because the former Massachusetts governor had promised to make the tax cuts revenue neutral by closing loopholes, although he has refused to say which loopholes.

"Gov. Romney has not said what he secret plan is for paying for these $5 trillion tax cuts," O'Malley explained. "Just like he won't talk about what his tax returns have been or how much money he's sheltering offshore."

An analysis by the the non-partisan Tax Policy Center concluded that Romney's plan would reduce revenue by $480 billion in 2015 and $5 trillion over 10 years.



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (143)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (764)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

We all knew this was coming. Never mind Republicans with their threats that none of them were going to support "legitimate rape" Senate candidate Todd Akin. Now that he's stuck to his guns and decided to stay in the race, they're starting to line up behind him anyway.

Sen. Blunt: Missouri Senate Race Will Be About Party Control:

Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO) said that Todd Akin, whose Senate bid he is now backing, can defeat incumbent Sen. Claire McCaskill in November during an interview on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday. Blunt said that rather than have a race about the candidate, Akin can win even after his "legitimate rape" comments because the race will be about which party controls the Senate.

Sadly he's right when it comes to just how important control of the Congress is and what direction this country is going to be headed, but of course just prior to these remarks, Blunt had the gall to blame the gridlock in the Senate on the Democrats. Blunt needs to go take a look in the mirror if he wants a look at who is responsible for being more worried about blocking a president's agenda for political purposes than the good of the people he's supposed to be representing or the economy improving.

Transcript via CNN below the fold:

Continue reading »



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (89)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (340)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) on Sunday asserted that presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney was sending "coded messages" and pandering to white voters by making jokes suggesting that President Barack Obama was not a U.S. citizen.

Speaking to a large crowd of supporters in Michigan on Friday, Romney had come the closest yet to personally embracing the so-called birther movement’s theory that President Barack Obama was not born in the U.S.

“No one’s ever asked to see my birth certificate,” the former Massachusetts governor said. “They know that this is the place that we were born and raised.”

On Sunday, O'Malley told CNN's Candy Crowley that Americans watching the Republican National Convention would be able to clearly see that Republicans were the "party of exclusion."

"The Republicans have kind of painted themselves into a real demographic corner," he explained. "And you hear people like even Jeb Bush saying that they have to change for the long term because this view of white, Anglo-Saxon Americans -- 'I'm a true American, no one questions where I was born' -- sort of thing is really off-putting to those of us who believe that our diversity is our strength."

"Can't you just take Mitt Romney at his word, he was joking?" Crowley asked. "What is so wrong with that? Have we lost -- quote -- our sense of humor, as [RNC Chairman Reince Priebus] suggested?"

"When you have policies, when you advance positions that are bashing of new Americans and new immigrants, when you have policies that want to take us back in terms of women's rights and freedom of women to choose, I think it becomes a very exclusive party," O'Malley insisted. "And that birther comment is simply more icing on that cake."

He continued: "The birther comment, when you combine it with Mitt Romney's other comments, comments he made abroad about the president not truly appreciating -- when he was in England -- the Anglo-Saxon perspective in the world, when you put it together with his anti-immigrant policies and the things that he has said, I think that what it reveals is sort of a perspective on America that would take us back to the days of [1950s sitcom] Ozzie and Harriet."

"Is that code for you think he's appealing to the white vote?" Crowley wondered.

"Look at the number of Republicans that have signed bills that make it harder to vote," the Maryland governor replied. "When you have a party that says coded things, that makes totally false ads up about saying the president is trying to undo welfare reform, I think you're going to see a lot of pretty heavily and not-so-subtly coded messages from the Romney-Ryan campaign that it is not in keeping an America with that is moving forward, that is growing, that is becoming more diverse with fuller freedoms for every individual."

(h/t: Talking Points Memo)



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (316)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (2534)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) struggled on Sunday to explain presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's investments outside the United States, including Swiss bank accounts and a corporation in Bermuda.

During an interview with ABC's Terry Moran, Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) ripped into Romney for betting "against America" with his foreign investments.

"President Obama is not running against the Almighty, he is running against the alternative," O'Malley explained. "And the alternative in this case is Gov. Mitt Romney, who had the 47th worst job-creation rate as governor, and also has a penchant, a talent for offshoring American jobs -- sending them overseas. And also maintaining offshore bank accounts in Bermuda, Swiss bank accounts."

The Maryland governor added: "I've never known of a Swiss bank account to build an American bridge, a Swiss bank account to create American jobs, or Swiss bank accounts to rebuild the levies to protect the people of New Orleans. That's not an economic strategy for moving our country forward."

Moran asked Jindal if it was even fair for voters to consider Romney's investments outside the U.S.

"The bottom line is I'm thrilled Mitt Romney has been successful in the private sector," Jindal demurred.

"Is it OK for voters to consider the money he has put outside of the country in tax havens offshore, in secret Bermuda companies?" Moran pressed. "Does that make sense for voters to consider?"

"I think voters will consider all the distractions put out by the Obama campaign," Jindal quipped. "At the end of the day, this election is about two fundamental choices. It's about President Obama, who wants to continue to spend money we don't have, incurred now a trillion dollar-plus deficit every year he's been president after he promised we'd cut the deficit in half."

But O'Malley quickly disagreed that the Obama campaign was throwing "sand in the eyes of the American voters" to divert attention away from the president's record.

"No, it's not a distraction at all," O'Malley insisted. "The relevance is this, that Gov. Romney can't claim that his state was actually great at creating jobs when he was governor so he's fallen back and said, 'Vote for me, I was a business man, I created jobs.' You want to talk about going the way of Europe? What went the way of Europe were the Swiss bank accounts and the American dollars that Mitt Romney stuffed in that offshore Swiss bank account, jobs that he facilitated companies in moving offshore, out of places like Ohio, out of Pennsylvania and Maryland."

"This is a fundamental disagreement between two different candidates and their vision for our county's future," he continued. "Barack Obama believes enough in our country to be willing to work for it and invest in it. Mitt Romney bets against America. He bet against America when he put his money in Swiss bank accounts and tax havens and shelters and also set up the secret company, the shell company in Bermuda. Which by the way in order to avoid disclosure, he put in his wife's name right before he became governor of Massachusetts."

"These are legitimate questions that a man who is holding himself as wanting to lead our country forward needs to answer."

Obama campaign adviser Robert Gibbs on Sunday called for Romney to release several years of tax returns to prove that he was not dodging tax laws.

"The one thing he could do, Candy, to clear up whether or not he’s done anything illegal, whether he’s shielding his income from taxes in either Bermuda or Switzerland is to do what every other presidential candidate has done, and that’s release a series of years of their own tax returns," Gibbs told CNN's Candy Crowley. "This is a guy whose slogan is ‘Believe in America’ and it should be ‘Business in Bermuda.’ That’s what Mitt Romney is all about."

(h/t: Talking Points Memo)



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (204)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (996)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

After Gov. Scott Walker appeared on CBS's Face the Nation, touting the voters looking for someone who's going to lead and "make touch decisions" as the reason he survived his recall election, the AFL-CIO's Richard Trumka pointed out that what Walker did was not lead. He was following the same right wing agenda as his Republican counterparts, who are allowing the American Legislative Exchange Conference, known as ALEC, to write their agenda for them.

As Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley pointed out, part of the reason Walker survived his recall election is that the voters did not like the idea of recalling their elected officials for any reason, short of criminal offenses, "And right now Governor Walker has only had three people in his administration indicted." As O'Malley also noted, for all his talk of leadership, Walker's state has the worst job creation record in the country.

Transcript via below the fold.

Continue reading »



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (247)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (692)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

I'm not sure what David Gregory has been smoking that he felt the need to ask former Speaker of the House and presidential candidate Newt Gingrich if he a: had any advice for Gov. Martin O'Malley should he run for president at some time in the future and b: if there's a snowball's chance in hell of Mitt Romney asking Gingrich to be his running mate, but he actually asked both near the end of his interview with the two of them on Meet the Press.

Newt Gingrich: 'Highly implausible' I would be Romney's running mate:

Former GOP candidate Newt Gingrich said it would be "highly implausible" for him to join Mitt Romney on the ticket as vice president.

Asked about his interest in serving as Romney's number two, Gingrich refused to rule it out, but made clear that he was not expecting to be in the running.

"I think that's highly implausible," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press." "I find that as implausible as you find it."[...]

Appearing alongside Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, who has been rumored to be a 2016 Democratic candidate for the White House, Gingrich offered pointed advice for a potential run.

"Raise a lot of money," he said, emphasizing the difficulties of a presidential bid.

"This has been a brutal, tough process at least since 1800, and it hasn't gotten any less brutal. It probably shouldn't," he said. "If you're not tough enough to get to the presidency, you're not tough enough to be president."

I doubt Gov. O'Malley could use any of the advice Newt Gingrich could give him about being a successful presidential candidate, but if he needs some advice on how to sell books while pretending he wants to be president, I'm sure Gingrich could be very helpful in that regard.



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (91)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (271)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

From this Sunday's State of the Union, while discussing whether President Obama's reelection prospects might hinge on the economy improving or not, Virginia's wingnut Gov. Bob McDonnell decided to throw out here what TPM's Sahil Kapur thinks might be a trial balloon in case the economy continues to improve; it's Republican governors that deserve credit for the recovery, not Obama:

Virginia Governor and Mitt Romney surrogate Bob McDonnell (R) on Sunday floated what may turn into a Republican talking point if the economy continues to improve: It wasn’t President Obama who made it happen, it was the GOP governors.

“Look, I’m glad the economy is starting to recover, but I think it’s because of what Republican governors are doing in their states, not because of the president,” McDonnell said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” [...]

The intricacy of McDonnell’s argument is noteworthy: He didn’t say jobs are created on the state level, as opposed to the federal level. He said the improvements happened because of Republican governors. That’s a difficult argument to make when the recovery is taking hold across the country, even in states with Democratic governors.

It’s also problematic because Republicans have been eager to give Obama ownership of the economy. But McDonnell’s trial balloon suggests that if the economic indicators continue to tick upward, the 2012 elections could shift from a battle over who’s to blame for a weak economy to who deserves credit for an improving one.

During the segment above, after McDonnell took credit for how his and other Republican led states are doing, Crowley cut off Gov. Martin O'Malley before he had a chance to respond to him. I'm wondering if he was going to point out that Virginia is doing well because of the amount of stimulus money his state accepted.

And after all the layoffs of government workers, their attack on public sector employees, with Republicans doing everything they can to sabotage any economic recovery on purpose for political gain, recall elections of unpopular Republicans, and Republican governors tanking in the polls over the last year due to their unpopular agendas, I say good luck with trying to make that argument to the public.

As far as O'Donnell's claim that the stimulus didn't work, I'd just refer readers back to Karoli's post on that -- Dear Democrats: The Stimulus Worked, Start Acting Like It.

Transcript below the fold.

Continue reading »



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (80)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (289)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Democratic Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley pointed out Sunday that Republican presidential candidates didn't seem to be running for their party's nomination as much as they were pandering to the tea party.

"I notice that [Alabama Gov. Haley Barbour] hasn't endorsed any of those that are running for president in his party yet," O'Malley told CBS' Bob Schieffer. "And that's because, Bob, they're not really -- you've seen the spectacle -- you talked about it yourself, the crowds booing the serviceman that spoke, the crowds applauding at the notion of letting someone die in the hospital. These candidates aren't running for the nomination of the Republican Party. They are running for the nomination of the tea party."

"They are not putting forward new ideas to create jobs that would qualify them to be president. They are pandering to the tea party to be the Mad Hatter... When President Obama runs against the backdrop of the big mess he was left, he will not be running against the Almighty, he will be running against the alternative. And right now, while their bench might be deep with personalities in the Republican Party, their pool is shallow in terms of new economic ideas or any sort of effective governance that's been proven in the field."

Barbour replied by saying that Republicans had a great chance if President Barack Obama decides to run on his first-term record.

"I mean, the idea that they are going to blame what happened in the last three years on [former President George W. Bush], you know next they will be talking about Herbert Hoover," Barbour explained.

"That's good analogy," O'Malley interrupted.

"Hey, I'm not surprised," Barbour said. "The Democrats ran against Hoover for 70 years. They gotta run against somebody because they sure can't run on Obamacare or his proposals to increase taxes on employers when the deal we're trying to do is have more employees. Yeah, they'll talk about Hoover, George Bush, Richard Nixon, Haley Barbour's too fat."