Mitt Romney US Republican presidential candidate speaks during the Republican presidential debate in Ames, Iowa 11 August 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Charlie Neibergall/poolPLYMOUTH (New Hampshire) | Mon Aug 15, 2011 6:49 pm EDT
PLYMOUTH, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Republican presidents pioneer Mitt Romney touted his record as a businessman on Monday, when he tried, the dynamics of the Texas Governor Rick Perry, stem cells, which the presidential election campaign Saturday closed.
Romney accused also billionaire investor Warren Buffett, Chief Executive Officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., "not in the simple" calls for higher taxes on the wealthy in a guest article by New York Times.
Romney, the co-founder of the leveraged buyout firm Bain Capital and a net worth of over $250 million, has said about 100 people in an Inn in the most important primary state of New Hampshire Massachusetts Governor, had to say his business helped to create thousands of jobs.
Even though he specifically mentioned not Perry, Romney appeared anxious contrast his background, including more than two decades in the private sector, with which the Texas Governor, since 1984 in public policy.
"I have to talk about the credibility of the economy in a way which otherwise nobody will at this stage," he said. "I will not need a primer on the functioning of the economy."
In a campaign from earlier in the day, Romney said that "worked in the real economy" was necessary, in the White House.
Perry came to New Hampshire on Saturday immediately after the announcement of his White House bid in South Carolina and vowed to run a 50-state campaign. Again, he will visit the State on Wednesday.
In Buffett, who stated in the New York Times piece, that he Romney that the famous investor could not take into account attract a lower income tax rate than many of his employees paid, said corporate taxes, paid the Berkshire.
"The problem with rich people is that many of them are smart," said Romney. "High taxes put on entrepreneurs and investors to dissuade them from Americans work."
(Reporting by Jason McLure.) (Editing by Ros Krasny and Peter Bohan)
No comments:
Post a Comment