Mitt Romney's Tax Returns
by Bryan Schott
07/23/2012 | 2117 views | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Mitt Romney has come under fire for refusing to release more than two years of his tax returns and for his work at Bain Capital.

Our political insiders were, not surprisingly, split along ideological lines about whether these issues will affect the race for the White House.

Mitt Romney is taking some heat for only releasing two years of his tax returns. In your opinion, is that enough information, or should he release more?
  Republican insiders Democratic insiders Utah Policy readers
2 years is enough 67% 7% 40%
He needs to release more 26% 93% 60%
No opinion 7% 0% 0%
Some anonymous comments:

"He needs to release more, as opportunist Democrats will look to make Romney's tax returns the 'birth certificate' of this election cycle. Romney just needs to fire back with this: 'Obama is more concerned with how I spent my money than how he spends your money Romney, out. (mic drop).'"

"I doubt what he did with his money is illegal. It's what's legal that the public will find disturbing. I expect he was able to take advantage of tax law (written by the likes of Bain lobbyists and passed by those who accept contributions from those lobbyists) that allow him to shield much of his income from taxation. And this from someone who is advocating even lower taxes on the wealthy."

"They are just trying to deflect people's attention from Obama's dismal record."

"Narrative of 2012 election: Republicans - 'The economy stinks and it's Obama's fault.' Democrats - 'Hey, look! A squirrel!'"

"If you are claiming to be a Captain of Capitalism, let's look at the entire record."

"When Obama releases his college transcripts and marijuana expense reports, Mitt should release his taxes."

"The only way he will put the issue to rest is full disclosure. If the returns show that he paid a lower rate of taxes than most Americans, oh well. He can respond by pointing out that the system is stacked in favor of the rich and that is the American, laissez-faire, free-market capitalist system which 'liberals want to destroy' by 'unfairly' taxing the most successful."

"What is Romney hiding? I don't want a President who uses overseas bank accounts as tax shelters. Is he ashamed of the United States or doesn't he think it is a secure country?"

"No brainier. He needs to release more both to defang the Obama attacks and just because it's the right thing to do. If he doesn't release more he's handing Obama campaign strategists a loaded gun."

"It's time for the birthers to recognize that their candidate also needs to release crucial documents. In fact, Romney's finances are as important for voters to have as Obama's birth certificate."

"Presidential candidates (including Mitt's father George) have traditionally released several years of tax records and that is what makes this a problem for Romney. His departure from the long-standing tradition fuels the speculation that he has something to hide."

"If he has any chance of beating Obama, he will have to come clean as to how much taxes he has paid on his personal wealth."

"As long as he paid his taxes, it is no one else's business."

"This on top of the bank accounts, the questions over his involvement in Bain, and issues with inconsistencies is becoming the lens that people are viewing Romney. This is John Kerry 2.0, the hider."

"The appearance of something to hide is intense. The only way to deal with it is to hand over more."

"He's running for president, not dog catcher. The public has a right to know who the leader of the free world is going to be, and when you're running on how great you are with business, tax returns are telling."

"He certainly looks like he has something to hide. You also can't help but think this is part of his conditioning as a Mormon -- the refusal of the LDS church to release its financial information has to somehow make him feel more justified in using the same tactics to conceal his finances."

"Mitt has been very successful in business. That's nothing to be ashamed of. He should follow his father's example and release all of his tax returns going back to 1999 to prove once and for all that he was not being compensated by Bain during the years the Obama administration has tried to pin on him. And when did we suddenly become anti-globalization, anyway? If Bain found a lower cost of production in a third-world company for their companies, there is nothing wrong with that. It's called capitalism."

"He is clearly hiding something that he does not want the American public to know about."

"Sorta unbelievable that - after running in 2008 and knowing the gauntlet that is the Presidential election - that the campaign wasn't much better prepared for such an obvious line of questions. Did they not think the issue would come up? It would have in 08 and it is now."

"Technically it is enough. It is only an issue to create an issue. It satisfies prurient interests and confirms that Mitt is very rich. This is not justification enough. If the IRS has not audited Mitt to determine his compliance with IRS rules they should and then leave it at that."

 
Barack Obama is hitting Romney for his work at Bain Capital. Do you think those attacks are registering with voters, or is the Bain issue a non-starter?
 
Republican insiders
Democratic insiders
Utah Policy readers
The Bain attacks are a big problem for Romney
5%
73%
39%
Voters don't care
50%
17%
18%
They're not a problem, but they could become one
42%
10%
36%
No opinion
3%
0%
7%
Some anonymous comments:

"Eventually left unchecked, this could become a problem. The sad part is that Team Obama keeps getting it wrong. Wrong dates, wrong assertions, wrong facts. The Bain attack strategy is really about firing up a portion of Obama's base known affectionately as 'Occupiers,' who turned against him 12-18 months ago, as their $100,000 in school debt for English lit degrees and subpar hygiene left them with no job prospects other than producing feature length documentary films about organic farming. Obama needs the drum circles to come together, and maybe, you know, grab a shower, and vote for him in November. But only if hemp arts and crafts is cancelled. Those are the only people fired up about the Bain thing. Most people are tired of watching his policies hurt jobs."

"I don't care, but there are some that will believe anything they hear."

"How can you claim to be a great manager, if your record of management is not disclosed?"

"Governor Romney should be proud of his work to strengthen good companies and liquidate weak companies. We should embrace capitalism rather than criticizing it."

"The attacks work for voters in most of the country but not on Utahns. Our local culture idolizes this type of unregulated business practices."

"This issue takes away from Romney's perceived ability to run the country fairly."

"It is what's we're talking about around the water cooler and in the break room!"

"Ultimately, it doesn't matter. He needs to return the conversation to the economy where he is strong and the President is not."

"Romney's response has been dismal and I think it is starting to stick and become the new norm. It doesn't help him that he is running as the great manager and his inability to manage his campaign is becoming so apparent."

"Bain in and of itself isn't the issue, it is Romney's continual dodging of the questions. If he would have stated his position from the beginning, it would be a dead issue. His bob and weave tactics only serve to make him more unbelievable. Whether or not he is actually hiding anything is become less of an issue than the fact that he is acting like he does."

"The majority of the voting public doesn't give two craps about the presidential race right now. But if Romney can't come up with an answer, it could be trouble in September/October."

"I'm not really sure. Certainly Democratic voters care, but they weren't going to swing Romney's way anyway (unless they're Mormon, and that's still a maybe). Republican voters probably just see it as anti-free enterprise or class warfare, and I don't think it hurts Mitt among them much. Although I do think moderate Republicans or conservative Christians, who are on the fence about Romney anyway, could be turned off and just not turn out to vote if he keeps up this kind of obfuscation."

"The attacks are a problem for Romney, but only because of the ham-fisted way his team has responded. Nobody cares that Mitt Romney is wealthy or that he has complex finances. People do care if their politicians don't seem to value transparency or accountability. Mitt's stonewalling on what should be a non issue is probably more damaging than anything the Obama campaign could dredge up."

"The Obama campaign has been successful at challenging the very issue that Romney touts as his strongest asset-his experience in finance and the private sector."

"Bain did everything that Romney says we should not do as a nation. Bain racked up big debt for companies, took personal profit, and then the companies went bankrupt under a mountain of debt. He also outsourced jobs to foreign nations. This doesn't sound like what we want in a President."

"Bain is an incredible firm that has helped transform multiple companies. Why are we allowing a guy who couldn't so much as run a lemonade stand criticize one of the most capable business people our country has produced?"

"He needs to just be straight up and honest What's the problem? We don't care how much money has - but we do care about attempts for him to hide things, and that's how it appears."

Respondents include - 

Fred Adams, Stuart Adams, Jess Agraz, Scott Anderson, Laura Arellano, Patrice Arent, Bette Arial, Neil Ashdown, Bruce Baird, Tom Barberi, Heather Barney, Steve Barth, Jeff Bell, Tom Berggren, Mike Bertelsen, Ron Bigelow, Emily Bingham-Hollingshead, Rob Bishop, Laura Black, Nanci Bockelie, Charles Bradley, Jim Bradley, Ralph Brown, Chris Bleak, Curt Bramble, Joel Briscoe, Ralph Brown, Aaron Browning, Dave Buhler, Ken Bullock, Ric Cantrell, Maura Carabello, Marty Carpenter, Rebecca Chavez-Houck, Kay Christensen, David Clark, Kim Coleman, Peter Corroon, Tim Cosgrove, Fred Cox, Lew Cramer, Gene Davis, Richard Davis, Brad Daw, Alan Dayton, Margaret Dayton, Mike Deaver, Brad, Dee, Joseph Demma, Jake Dennis, Dan Deuel, Jeff Dixon, Brian Doughty, Carl Downing, Randy Dryer, Susan Duckworth, Donald Dunn, Alan Eastman, Becky Edwards, Scott Ericson, Chase Everton, Jessica Fawson, Janice Fisher, Wendy Fisher, Lorie Fowlke, Ronald Fox, Claire Francis, Ryan Frandsen, Adam Gardiner, Jordan Garn, Ernie Gamonal, Luke Garrott, Dave Gessel, Sheryl Ginsberg, Natalie Gochnour, Robert Grow, Karen Hale, David Hansen, Neil Hansen, Joe Hatch, Jeff Hartley, Dan Hauser, Lynn Hemmingway, Deidre Henderson, Neal Hendrickson, Casey Hill, Lyle Hillyard, Kory Holdaway, Randy Horiuchi, Ben Horsley, Bruce Hough, Scott Howell, Greg Hughes, Miriam Hyde, Allison Isom, Casey Jackson, Eric Jergensen, Mike Jerman, Jonathan Johnson, Michael Jolley, Gordon Jones, Leslie Jones, Pat Jones, Kirk Jowers, Jeremy Keele, Brian King, Scott Konopasek, Steve Kroes, Chris Kyler, Carter Livingston, Fred Lampropoulos, Clark Larsen, Douglas Larson, David Litvack, Larry Lunt, Matt Lyon, Ben McAdams, Daniel McCay, Gayle McKeachnie, JT Martin, Maryann Martindale, Jason Mathis, Bob Mayhew, Karen Mayne, Bret Milburn, Derek Miller, Rob Miller, Ethan Millard, Brett Millburn, Karen Morgan, Jeffery Morton, Mike Mower, Holly Mullen, Wayne Niederhauser, Mike Noel, Randy O'Hara, Ralph Okerlund, James Olsen, Val Oveson, Kelly Patterson, John Pearce, Helen Peters, Karen Peterson, Frank Pignanelli, Becky Pirente, Marie Poulson, Jason Powers, Tami Pyfer, Joe Pyrah, Mike Reberg, Jill Remington Love, Lauren Richards, Holly Richardson, Robin Riggs, James Roberts, Luz Robles, Ross Romero, Carol Sapp, Don Savage, Bryan Schott, Shauna Scott-Bellaccomo, Jay Seegmiller, Jennifer Seelig, Patrick Shea, Randy Shumway, Soren Simonsen, Jeremy Slaughter, Brendan Smith, Brian Somers, Carol Spackman-Moss, Robert Spendlove, Barbara Stallone, Howard Stephenson, David Stringfellow, Mike Styler, Shinika Sykes, Juliette Tennert, Gary Thorup, Kevin Van Tassell, Royce Van Tassel, Doug Thompson, Michael Waddoups, Laura Warburton, Chuck Warren, Christine Watkins, LaVarr Webb, Todd Weiler, Alan West, Mark Wheatley, Larry Wiley, Ted Wilson, Carl Wimmer, Mike Winder, Travis Wood, Thomas Wright, Crystal Young-Otterstrom

Results from the UtahPolicy.com/KSL Insider poll can be heard on KSL Radio every Friday and are published on Utah Policy.com every Monday.

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Ten Things You Need to Know for Friday
by Bryan Schott
May 24, 2013 | 14668 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Countdown: There are 166 days to the 2013 municipal elections, 249 days until the start of the 2014 Legislature, 525 days until the 2014 midterm elections and 962 days until the 2016 Iowa Caucuses. 

An analysis says expanding Medicaid coverage will save Utah more than $130 million and would give health insurance to 123,000 residents [Tribune].

A new report ranks Utah #1 for economic outlook next year [Utah Policy, Tribune].

House Majority Leader Brad Dee goes on a European vacation with three lobbyists, but Dee insists the trip was above board because everybody paid their own way and they didn’t discuss politics [Tribune].

Former Attorney General Mark Shurtleff is caught on tape offering to get $2 million for Utah Businessman Darl McBride if he would shut down a website critical of another Utah businessman. That money was to come from a third Utah businessman who was in trouble with the Attorney General’s office [Tribune].

Former Legislator and current blogger Holly Richardson says she’s had enough with the “culture of corruption” permeating the Attorney General’s office [Holly on the Hill].

Sen. Orrin Hatch wants to hear from Utahns who think they have been inappropriately targeted by the IRS as part of his investigation into misconduct by the agency [Tribune].

Kennecott lays off 100 workers because of the massive landslide at their Bingham Canyon Mine [Tribune, Deseret News].

The Boy Scouts vote to allow gay members in their ranks [Deseret News].

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman launches a new political action committee to support Republicans who share his point of view [Tribune].

Gov. Gary Herbert says he is confident the state can work out a deal to avoid taxing the electricity used by the new National Security Agency data center at Camp Williams [Tribune].
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