Today’s Headlines – Sept. 19, 2012

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including a series of reports detailing who makes up Romney’s so-called “47 percent” who get tax breaks and what federal assistance they receive — whether it is Medicare, Medicaid or another entitlement program.

: Analysis: Romney Describes Government鈥檚 Role As Dramatically More Limited Than Obama鈥檚 View
Republican Mitt Romney, in describing nearly half of Americans as being docile dependents of the state, and saying it鈥檚 a 鈥渇oreign concept鈥 for government to redistribute income, is outlining a philosophy that鈥檚 not only sharply at odds with President Barack Obama鈥檚 views. It鈥檚 also difficult to square with the facts of how Social Security, Medicare, the tax code and scores of other institutions work. Romney鈥檚 claim that 47 percent of Americans won鈥檛 take 鈥減ersonal responsibility鈥 鈥 instantly crystallized his philosophical differences with Obama when the remarks came to light Monday (9/18).

: Romney Says Remarks On Voters Help Clarify Position
Mr. Romney, who on Monday called the remarks inelegant, suggested on Tuesday that it was time for a full debate about dependency, entitlements and what his campaign characterized as a long history of Mr. Obama鈥檚 support for 鈥渞edistributionist鈥 policies. But despite the effort by Mr. Romney to take the offensive, his campaign spent the day working to keep the episode from becoming a turning point in a campaign that until now has remained neck and neck, and trying to minimize the damage from the disclosure of another set of remarks from the fund-raiser, in which he suggested that a two-state solution for peace between the Israelis and Palestinians 鈥 longstanding United States policy 鈥 was not feasible (Rutenberg and Parker, 9/18).

For more headlines …

: Romney鈥檚 47 Percent: His Math Is Correct, But Much Federal Aid Goes To The Middle Class, Too
While it鈥檚 true most of those nonpayers are poor, the numbers include many others who got tax breaks because they are old, have children in college or didn鈥檛 owe taxes on interest from state and local bonds. And of those who didn鈥檛 write checks to the IRS, 6 in 10 still paid Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, and more than that paid federal excise taxes on items such as gasoline, alcohol and cigarettes, said Roberton Williams, who analyzes taxes at the center (9/18).

: Raw Data Support 鈥 And Undercut 鈥 Romney Take On Who Gets Benefits
Federal benefits include those going to low-income Americans, such as food stamps and Medicaid, the health-care program for the poor. Other benefits from programs such as Medicare and Social Security flow to older Americans who, in most cases, paid taxes for decades before they qualified (Paletta and McKinnon, 9/18).

: Health-Law Limits Cloud Democrats鈥 Push For Hispanic Vote
he Department of Health and Human Services issued rules last month that said the young people wouldn’t be allowed to shop for insurance policies through newly established health exchanges or receive federal subsidies toward the cost of premiums starting in 2014. They are also not eligible to enroll in the federal-state Medicaid program for low-income Americans, the department has said. The rules were first reported by the New York Times on Tuesday (Radnofsky, 9/18).

: Wisconsin Offers Window Into Challenges Confronting Romney
Rob Jankowski, an independent voter who supported Mr. Obama four years ago but has been disappointed by his economic leadership and disapproves of his health care plan, is among the 3 percent of voters in the survey who say they are still undecided. He said he did not feel loyalty to Mr. Obama simply because he supported him last time, but he said Mr. Romney had not made his case. 鈥 The New York Times, in collaboration with Quinnipiac and CBS News, is tracking the presidential race with recurring polls in six states (Zeleny and Connelly, 9/19).

: Obama Up 8 Points Over Romney In Virginia
With just seven weeks of campaigning left before the November election, President Obama holds a clear lead over Mitt Romney in Virginia, buoyed by growing optimism about the state of the country and fueled by a big gender gap working in his favor, according to a new Washington Post poll (Vozzella, Balz and Cohen, 9/18).

: Christie鈥檚 Budget Faulted As Fiscal Outlook Is Called Weak
The ratings agency said it lowered its outlook because it believed the governor鈥檚 revenue projections for the current fiscal year were overly optimistic, warning that the budget was structurally unsound. In particular, the agency took note of the administration鈥檚 reliance on one-time transfers of money to fill gaps in the state鈥檚 $32 billion budget. At the same time, it noted that the state will have to spend more in the coming years to meet pension and Medicaid obligations (Zernike, 9/18).

: Brown Signs Bill Revamping Workers鈥 Compensation Insurance
Approved by the Legislature on the last night of the legislative session, the package would boost payments to permanently disabled victims of on-the-job accidents by about $740 million a year and hand employers a major break on workers’ compensation insurance premiums (Castellanos, 9/19).

: Study: Obesity Rate To Jump By 50% By 2030
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Trust for America鈥檚 Health released a new report Tuesday projecting America鈥檚 obesity rates through 2030. If current obesity rates continue, every state could have an obesity rate above 44 percent by 2030, and most states could have rates higher than 50 percent, the report found (Smith, 9/19).

: More Than 45% Of Californians May Be Obese By 2030, Report Says
If you think America is fat now, just wait 20 years. So says a state-by-state projection of the nation’s future obesity rates that has arrived at some terrifying results: By 2030, every state in the nation may well have obesity rates above 44%, with most having rates above 50% (Bardin, 9/18).

: Wisconsin Attorney General Appeals Union Law Ruling, Asks Judge For Stay
Wisconsin鈥檚 attorney general on Tuesday appealed a court ruling repealing major parts of Gov. Scott Walker鈥檚 law effectively ending collective bargaining for most public workers. 鈥 The law as passed by the Republican-controlled Legislature in 2011 applied to all public employees except police, firefighters, local transit workers and emergency medical service employees. It limits collective bargaining on wage increases to the rate of inflation. Other issues, such as workplace safety, vacation and health benefits, were excluded from collective bargaining (9/18).

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