James Carville Slams Mitt Romney as “Not a Very Good Candidate” in the Wake of His “Poor” Comment – Video 2/1/12

Here is video of Democrat James Carville hammering Mitt Romney as proving he is “not a very good candidate” by his statement earlier today that he is “not concerned about the very poor” – because they already have a safety net to help them in this bad economy. Romney was saying his focus is on helping the struggling middle-class of Americans that are falling through the cracks in this economic downturn. But his comment is being trumpeted far and wide as him saying he does not care about the poor.

Carville said Romney is not a very good candidate, and that he does not understand conservative doctrine. Carville added he lives with conservative doctrine in his house – referring to his marriage with Republican Mary Matalin.

Via Daily Caller

  • http://perceptionasreality.blogspot.com/ brooks

    and what was the name of Carville’s last book?
    something about 40 years of Dem rule?

  • Blind Eye Jones

    I see that Carville has come back into the Democrat fold and has buttoned his lip about Obama.  And as a Democrat he is very selective in his hearing: only hears a half of a sentence a Republican is saying and smears him with the remark.  Politics as usual again.  

  • Brad

    Not caring about the very poor because they have a safety net which will be fixed if it has holes is not a good leadership position.  A good leadership position is I want the very rich to keep their money, I want the middle income to be able to make more money and I want the very poor to make money.  We can do all 3 with my leadership because a growing capitalistic free market can win the day where less and less people are dependent with low belief in themselves and more and more people are growing in skills and creating jobs because they are empowered by the system they were previously hamstrung by. 


Support the Wounded Warrior Project

Poll of the Week


Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

Follow Us


on twitteron facebookby RSS feed