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Romney raps Obama on jobs

Published by Tim McNulty on .

Coming back to the Pittsburgh area – and returning to the preeminent issue of this presidential campaign -- former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney slammed President Barack Obama's handling of the economy, particularly in creating jobs.

"So many became discouraged, they stopped looking for work," Mr. Romney said, referring to new statistics showing the workforce dropped by 340,000 in April.

"This is a sad time in America when people who want work can't find jobs."

The comments by the presumed GOP presidential nominee came the same day a new Labor Department report showed the unemployment rate dipped slightly to 8.1 percent last month, but the country only added 115,000 jobs.. He made them at a campaign event inside the Sauereisen construction materials company in O'Hara.

The event was held after a much-publicized – but private – meeting with former GOP primary foe Rick Santorum in Mt. Washington. Mr. Romney said in an interview this morning that he did not expect Mr. Santorum to endorse him at the meeting but rather that "you're going to see us all come together."

The White House lauded number of the jobs added, while warning that jobs numbers are volatile and not the best way to look at the country's long-term prospects in recovering from the recession.

"Today's employment report provides further evidence that the economy is continuing to heal from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, but much more remains to be done to repair the damage caused by the financial crisis and the deep recession," said a statement from Alan B. Krueger, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors. " It is critical that we continue the economic policies that are helping us dig our way out of the deep hole that was caused by the severe recession that began at the end of 2007.

The Republican running for the 12th District congressional seat that includes O'Hara – attorney Keith Rothfus – worked the overflow crowd inside the Sauereisen plant, where complaints about jobs and the economy dominated. The jobs report was a perfect platform for Romney, Rothfus and other Republicans to talk about economic issues after a week dominated by talk of Osama bin Laden, Afghanistan and President Obama's handling of foreign policy issues.

"Big government politics aren't working. We need to go back and retool," Mr. Rothfus said. He faces Democratic incumbent Mark Critz of Johnstown in November.

Mr. Romney repeated his regular remarks about repealing Obama's health care reform package, stripping regulatory holds on coal, natural gas and other energy sources, and cutting government. But repeatedly he returned to the economy.

"People across the country are having hard times and wondering why it is . . I'll tell you why it is. President Obama is out of ideas, he's out of excuses, and in 2012 it's time to make sure we put him out of office," Mr. Romney said.

Democrats and their allies in organized labor knew such comments were coming and welcomed Mr. Romney back to Pittsburgh by arguing his platform – and history as a venture capitalist – show he is out of touch with middle class voters.

Some 20 Democratic and union officials counter-protested the O'Hara event, criticizing among other things Mr. Romney's opposition to the auto industry bailout. "If they had listen to Romney on the economy, we would have lost Detroit," said Nancy Mills, the chair of the Allegheny County Democratic committee.

The Democratic National Committee, too, had some fun with the morning meeting between Romney and Santorum, noting some of Santorum's criticisms of his former foe.

"Rick Santorum thinks based on Mitt Romney's failed jobs and economic record in Massachusetts that America would be in trouble with him at the helm," said a memo from the DNC's Brad Woodhouse, "that his time as a corporate raider is definitely NOT what Americans are looking for in a president, that it's unfair that Mitt Romney pays a lower tax rate than many middle class Americans and that Mitt Romney should release his tax returns. Senator, we couldn't agree more. All this ought to make for an interesting meeting."

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Stage is set

Published by Tim McNulty on .

Romneyplant
The country music is on the P.A. and (by now) most of the seats above are filled for Mitt Romney's appearance today at the Sauereisen plant in O'Hara today at noon. PA12 GOP congressional candidate Keith Rothfus is working the crowd.

Those are bags of acidproof concrete, affixed with "Made in the USA" stickers, behind the podium.

U.S. Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Upper St. Clair, and the state GOP chair Rob Gleason are also here.

UPDATE: Romney's primate meeting with Rick Santorum this morning was at the offices of Santorum's longtime political consultant John Brabender in Mt. Washington. (CNN)

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Pulling out the doormat for Romney

Published by Tim McNulty on .

Greetings from RIDC park in O'Hara. Mitt Romney comes to the suburbs north of Pittsburgh today after (presumably) his private meeting with Rick Santorum, which Jim O'Toole sets up here. (Romney said this morning on Fox that he doesn't expect an endorsement from Santorum today, but "you're going to see us all come together.") While he was still in the campaign Santorum said some awkward things about the former Massachusetts governor, largely about health care and the economy, and today labor unions and the Obama adminstration filled in the rest, trying to lambaste him on middle class economic issues.

The Romney camp, meanwhile, is hitting Obama on the latest job report, which shows a bit of growth but not enough to lower the unemployment rate, which at 8.2% is staying at a three-year low:

"President Obama has broken countless promises during his time in office – but none more important than his promise to help create jobs and get our economy moving again. From green jobs that never materialized to an unemployment rate that has remained above 8% for thirty-nine straight months, President Obama's rhetoric simply doesn't match with his failed economic record," said Andrea Saul, Romney's spokesperson.

About 20 union members (from the Steelworkers, Operating Engineers, AFL-CIO and others) gathered in front of the Sauereisen construction materials company this sunny morning to hit him on several issues, including his opposition to the auto industry bailout. The group was joined by the chair of Allegheny County's Democratic committee, Nancy Mills. "If they had listen to Romney on the economy, we would have lost Detroit," she said.

Romney will get a better reception inside the specialty concrete company, which should be packed with Republican partisans. In the meantime, the DNC and the AFL-CIO are doing their best too to pull out the Pittsburgh welcome mat from Romney's feet.

"Mitt Romney is wrong for working Pennsylvanians and he can't escape the positions he took in the primary. The AFL-CIO will hold him accountable," said spokesman Yuri Beckelman. The labor group (which has 900,000 members in the state) issued a long report card on Romney's past statements on labor and working class issues, and the Obam issued a memo (and the video above) on Santorum's past statements on his former primary foe.

"So, to summarize," said the memo from Brad Woodhouse of the Democratic National Committee, "Rick Santorum thinks based on Mitt Romney's failed jobs and economic record in Massachusetts that America would be in trouble with him at the helm, that his time as a corporate raider is definitely NOT what Americans are looking for in a president, that it's unfair that Mitt Romney pays a lower tax rate than many middle class Americans and that Mitt Romney should release his tax returns. Senator, we couldn't agree more. All this ought to make for an interesting meeting."

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Orie to resign soon; seeks sentence delay

Published by Tim McNulty on .

From Paula Reed Ward:

State Sen. Jane C. Orie, R-McCandless, who has asked for a two-month delay in her sentencing set for May 21 on public corruption charges, said she will resign from her post then regardless of the judge's decision.

In a motion filed this week, her attorney, William Costopoulos, asked for the postponement because he said he needs additional time to prepare and because he's collecting reference letters on her behalf. Ms. Orie was convicted on 14 of 24 counts against her, including forgery, tampering with evidence, theft of services and ethics violations.

Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey A. Manning is not expected to make a decision on the motion until at least next week.

In the two-page motion, Mr. Costopoulos wrote, "Sen. Jane C. Orie intends to formally resign from the Senate of Pennsylvania on or before May 21, 2012, even assuming this motion is granted."

Ms. Orie was convicted on March 26 after a month-long trial. It was the second time the case against her was heard by a jury because the first trial in February 2011 ended in a mistrial when prosecutors accused the senator of submitting fraudulent documents to the court.

A spokesman said the district attorney's office opposes the delay.

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Chalk another win for Corbett

Published by Tim McNulty on .

corbettcloseupWe meant to write this yesterday, but before we forget: chalk up another win for Gov. Tom Corbett and his behind the scenes negotiating style with UPMC & Highmark over a feud affecting people across Western Pennsylvania.

The low-key public style matched with hard work privately paid off two months ago in the governor's role in getting Shell Oil to place its $1 billion chemical "cracker" plant in Monaca. In that case Corbett quietly worked execs with a Steeler game while also pouring over Google Maps at the governor's mansion. And like that announcement, it's not clear what will happen in the long run -- some analysts say the hospital/insurer deal is only a temporary band-aid and will ultimately lead to higher prices for customers .

But Corbett was still key in getting a deal reached, as even the Senate's top Democrat acknowledged. From Bill Toland:

On April 2 -- the day after then-Highmark CEO Ken Melani was fired -- Republican Gov. Tom Corbett, Mr. White and Mr. Costa, along with Annmarie Kaiser (Mr. Corbett's secretary of legislative affairs) and Todd Shamash (the governor's deputy chief of staff and health care expert), met with UPMC and Highmark officials.

Mr. Costa said the meeting was instrumental from a political standpoint, although it didn't stir any breakthroughs from a business standpoint.

"That meeting helped move it forward," he said. "We needed the support of the administration to extend [the contract] longer than Jan. 1, 2014." And the legislators needed the weight of the governor's office to show the parties, particularly UPMC, that the Legislature was serious about some of the bills on the table, one of which would have forced the two parties into binding arbitration.

"Quite frankly, the governor's desire to see this brought to closure was key," Mr. Costa said.

While neither the legislators nor the governor presented a "stick," or threatened any hard deadlines, it was important for both Highmark and UPMC to know that "we were prepared to move on some legislation," perhaps by the end of May, Mr. Costa said.