Newspaper Endorsements: New York Observer

The New York Observer has endorsed Mitt Romney for president:

While we admire Mr. Obama, we believe he squandered an opportunity to bring positive change to Washington—and what change he did bring will burden future generations. We continue to rack up debt, buy services we cannot afford and allow unfunded liabilities to continue to grow. This has to end.

Rather than reimagining government’s role in society and the economy by embracing the courageous alternatives proposed by the Simpson-Bowles commission two years ago, Mr. Obama turned to neo-New Deal policies. Rather than building creative partnerships with the private sector, the president chose to demonize the successful. Rather than strengthen the nation’s relationship with Israel as the Arab world imploded, Mr. Obama treated Jerusalem as less a friend than a burden.

Mr. Romney, on the other hand, promises to bring a new and refreshing attitude to Washington, one that speaks to his experience as both a successful business leader and the governor of a state not known for its affection for Republicans.

As he surveys the nation’s stubbornly sluggish economy, Mr. Romney isn’t looking to point fingers, and he certainly isn’t looking to single out chief executives, entrepreneurs and high earners for demagogic attacks and punitive tax proposals. Critics have lampooned him as out of touch; in fact, it is Mr. Obama who has lost sight of the fact that American capitalism is the greatest anti-poverty program in human history.

The New York Observer endorsed Barack Obama in 2008.

2 comments… add one
  • I keep seeing these statements about how bold the Simpson-Bowles plan was, but I still think it was pretty weak tea myself. (No metaphor to current political movements intended.)

    But now to go to the park and let my little girl run around like the crazy person she is for a couple of hours. Playgrounds are great antidotes to politics – everyone is so happy to be there!

  • Ugh, not metaphor. Allusion perhaps? Crap, I don’t know. To the playground!

Leave a Comment