Paul Ryan, who famously suggested that the General Motors plant in his hometown closed because of Obama administration policies when it actually closed under President Bush, is now going for an even bigger rewrite of history.
He is claiming that his austerity agenda -- at least the part that makes tax cuts for the rich the supreme imperative -- remains popular. Indeed, to hear Ryan tell it, those ideas almost prevailed.
In an ABC News interview a week after the election, Ryan was asked whether President Obama has a mandate to call for raising taxes on the rich. "I don't think so," said Ryan, who argued that, "This is a very close election."
Ryan rejects the notion that his ideas lost. Indeed, he still claims he's promoting "popular ideas." And he says of the Republican ticket: "It was a well-run campaign. We made this campaign about big ideas and big issues, which is the kind of campaign we wanted to run, so we ran the kind of campaign we wanted to run."
But Barack Obama also ran on big ideas. On the morning before the election, Obama appeared just a few miles up the road from Ryan's hometown of Janesville, Wisconsin.
"If we're serious about the deficit, we can't just cut our way to prosperity. We've also got to ask the wealthiest Americans to go back to the tax rates they paid when Bill Clinton was in office," the Democratic president told a crowd that had just heard Bruce Springsteen sing and speak about the need to create a more equitable America. "And by the way, we can afford it. I haven't talked to Bruce, but I know he can afford it. I can afford it. Mr. Romney can afford it."
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