Conservative media is, if you’ll pardon the 21st-century pun,
all atwitter following Romney advisor Eric Fehrnstrom’s interview with
MSNBC’s Chuck Todd in which Fehrnstrom said that Governor Romney
believes the Obamacare “individual mandate” is a penalty rather
than a tax.
Some analysts on the right are describing it as “snatching
defeat from the jaws of victory” while Democrats think it’s such a
big deal that their “Rapid Response” team has posted the video of
the interview to their YouTube channel (linked above.)
And on these very pages, Jeff Lord suggests that Romney should
“Take
Eric Fehrnstrom Off Television.”
No doubt Fehrnstrom’s words seem counter-productive on the
surface. And no doubt that to the extent they can be spun by the
left or by the media (if you will pardon my redundancy) as
undermining opposition to Obamacare, the words are
counter-productive.
But if you actually listen to the relevant 90 seconds of the
interview, a fair hearing of Fernstrohm suggests he was trying to
make a different point: Governor Romney believes that the
individual mandate is not a tax, and therefore that it is
unconstitutional.
Fehrnstrom was clumsily reemphasizing that Mitt Romney agrees,
as the candidate has said from within minutes of the Roberts’
cave-in on Obamacare, with the Supreme Court’s four dissenting
Justices, namely that Obamacare should have been found entirely
invalid.
(To be sure, Romney prefers the mandate not to be a tax because
it it were one, that would allow Romney to be accused of having
raised taxes in Massachusetts. Not the most important political
argument of the day but nevertheless something he would rather
avoid.)
What Romney should say is this: “If calling Obamacare a tax was
the twisted logic required by the Supreme Court to uphold a law
which based on its own language (not calling it a tax) would
otherwise have been overturned as unconstitutional, then
Republicans are perfectly justified using all legislative methods
which apply to taxes to repeal this horrendous law. But just as the
Court had to also say that it is not a tax in order to be able to
hear the case in the first place, I continue to believe that the
mandate is what the law’s plain language says it is and what
Democrats across the board have always said it is, a penalty, which
the Supreme Court made clear would have been unconstitutional on
that basis. In other words, whether you call it a tax or not, this
assault on our nation’s health care system and our liberty must go,
and when elected I will do everything in my power to make sure it
does.”
A careful hearing of Fehrnstrom’s words suggest this was the
message he was trying to get across. He didn’t do the best possible
job, but neither were his words as undercutting of an
anti-Obamacare message and movement as pundits on both sides of the
political aisle are suggesting. Eric Fehrnstrom’s only real mistake
was wording his thoughts in a way that they could be sliced and
diced to his candidate’s disadvantage. True, one would wish that
the senior advisor to the Republican candidate for president would
not make this mistake on such an important issue. But in this case,
I say let he who has never slightly misworded his point, even an
important point, cast the first stone.
Now that the blogosphere is crucifying Fehrnstrom and throwing
smoke bombs to distort the Romney campaign’s position on this
critical issue, Mitt Romney should offer a well-considered
statement which reinforces his commitment to dismantling Obamacare
while clarifying the basic point that Fehrnstrom was trying to
make: Romney believes the mandate is not a tax and that therefore
the entire law is unconstitutional, but if the Court wants to save
the law by calling it a tax, well, he can play that game too.
fmm| 7.3.12 @ 12:31PM
A spokesman should not put his mouth in gear before using his brain. If he is unable to coherently explain his bosses views, then he needs to go in favor of someone who can.
Jake| 7.3.12 @ 1:02PM
The public face for Romney continues to make statements that supply the left / media and
the anti Romney on the far right
with talking points.
Even if his intent was not what he actually said.
For such a well run organization , this is a rare stumble and Fehrnstrom's misspeaks cannot continue.
A much better spokesman would be someone like Romney advisor Dan Senor.
kingsmill| 7.3.12 @ 1:04PM
Fehrnstrom is relaying a "well-considered" statement. He is not a surrogate who ran off the plantation. This clown formulates the message for the Romney campaign. This mess is the message of the boss.
DRed| 7.3.12 @ 1:04PM
How is Mittens supposed to call Obamacare a horrendous law and an assault on liberty when it's based on his signature achievement as a governor?
Mike Rogers | 7.3.12 @ 4:00PM
Fehrnstrom needs to be shaken like an etch-a-sketch!
Oldefarte| 7.3.12 @ 8:13PM
Correct me if I'm wrong, but did not Romney state absolutely that on day one of his administration, he would repeal this law? Case closed. WTF does it matter what he did as Massachusetts governor while involved with trying to manage the most liberal state in the nation dominated politically by Democrats and knee-cappedly so by the Kennedy political machine? Its amazing that Romney wasn't put in an Oldsmobile and run off of a bridge to drown inside; or to have otherwise disappeared never to be ever heard from again simply for being a Republican in that state. Why is not Scott Brown within the federal witness protection program now? Give me a GD break please! Start focusing on Obama and Democrats and what they do, say, think etc; and quit falling into their Cloward-Piven playbook by critisizing Romney, Roberts etc. You're doing exactly what they want you to do without even having to pay you for same. The same thing occurred in 2008 and the result is the last 3 1/2 years of destruction of this nation!!!!!!!
Steve851| 7.3.12 @ 11:07PM
There is no spin to save Fehrnstrom (or for that matter Romney for having such pathetic people on his team). Romney needs to get his act together very soon. No sign of that happening yet.
Longdrycreek | 7.4.12 @ 2:54PM
He is in communications and on the Romney team. I'd fire him faster than a speeding bullet because if he cannot say what he means, and needs a defender, he is not worth a "bucket of spit" [John Nance Gardner, FDR's VP].