YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    AdWatch: Romney's welfare ad relies on assumptions

    WASHINGTON (AP) — TITLE: "Right Choice.

    LENGTH: 60 seconds.

    AIRING: Mitt Romney's campaign did not disclose where the ad is running.

    KEY IMAGES: Opens with President Bill Clinton signing legislation that overhauled the nation's welfare program by requiring recipients to meet certain work requirements to continue getting cash assistance. It then cuts to an image of President Barack Obama. A narrator says, "Obama quietly announced a plan to gut welfare reform by dropping work requirements."

    Next, it shows images of people at work and says that "under Obama's plan, you wouldn't have to work and wouldn't have to train for a job. They just send you your welfare check."

    The ad then moves to a picture of Mitt Romney visiting work sites and tells viewers, "Mitt Romney will restore the work requirement because it works."

    ANALYSIS: The ad released by Romney's campaign paints Obama as attempting to gut the work requirements that have played such a critical factor trimming the welfare rolls. It echoes conservatives' worst fears that a July 12 letter from the Obama administration to the states amounts to an end-run around the program's work requirements.

    But that letter does not unilaterally repeal or waive the law. Instead, it gives states the chance to make changes to their welfare programs and still be counted as meeting work participation requirements. It's a leap to assume that governors and legislators will seek to return to "plain old welfare" and that the Obama administration will give them the go-ahead.

    And, in 2005, Romney joined several other GOP governors in promoting "increased waiver authority."

    Under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, states must engage at least half of their TANF families in work for a minimum number of hours each month. States can lose federal funding if they don't. The states have some discretion to determine who must work and what activities count as work.

    The Obama administration said in the letter that it would consider granting waivers from work participation requirements for an array of projects, but that it would not approve any waiver likely to reduce access to employment.

    Some in the GOP are making the case that tinkering with the law's work requirements through the waiver process amounts to an unraveling of welfare reform. Obama officials say that's not their intent at all. And the administration said it would only approve those waivers that would move more people from welfare to work.

    The ad also ignores that governors from both parties have called for more flexibility in determining what constitutes allowable work activities under the law. For example, in August 2011, the state of Utah called for waivers that expanded the definition of countable work activities.

    "It is the narrow definitions of what counts and the burdensome documentation and verification processes that are not helpful," the Utah letter said.

    Romney was among eight GOP governors who weighed into the TANF reauthorization debate with a letter in 2005 that said "increased waiver authority" and other features of a Senate bill were "important aspects of moving recipients from welfare to work." He was governor of Massachusetts at the time.

    EDITOR'S NOTE _ An occasional look at the claims in political advertising.

    Loading...
    • Copper reserves at China's Sicomines in Congo less than hoped

      KINSHASA (Reuters) - Copper reserves at a mine owned by Sicomines, a miner at the centre of a $6 billion resources for infrastructure deal between China and Democratic Republic of Congo, have fallen more than 30 percent short of expectations, a senior Congolese official said. Congo agreed in 2008 to cede mining rights to Sicomines, a joint venture between China's Sinohydro, the China Railway Group Ltd and Congolese miner Gecamines, in exchange for the building of roads, schools, railways, hospitals and dams. ...

    • Cycling-Road-Giro d'Italia points classification after stage 18

      May 23 (Infostrada Sports) - Points Classification Giro d'Italia after Stage 18 on Thursday 1. Mark Cavendish (Britain / Omega Pharma - Quick-Step) 113 2. Cadel Evans (Australia / BMC Racing) 109 3. Vincenzo Nibali (Italy / Astana) 103 4. Carlos Betancur (Colombia / AG2R) 94 5. Mauro Santambrogio (Italy / Vini Fantini) 89 6. Giovanni Visconti (Italy / Movistar) 86 7. Rigoberto Uran (Colombia / Team Sky) 86 8. Elia Viviani (Italy / Cannondale) 72 9. Ramunas Navardauskas (Lithuania / Garmin) 65 10. Giacomo Nizzolo (Italy / RadioShack) 61

    • No Wonder Republican Criticism of Obama Isn’t Working

      Henny Youngman, the late borscht belt comedian, told hundreds of politically incorrect jokes. One of them was his response when asked, “How’s your wife?” “Compared to what?” he’d say.

    • Early Land Animals Lacked Good Bites

      Tens of millions of years passed between the emergence of land animals and the evolution of an efficient apparatus for munching on the available fare. Karen Hopkin reports.

    • Trayvon Martin texts, photos: Might they change Zimmerman trial?

      Ultimately, many of the photos and cellphone records of Trayvon Martin released online Thursday by George Zimmerman’s defense attorneys – indicating that the slain teenager smoked marijuana, got into fights at school, and had an interest in, and perhaps access to, guns – may be ruled inadmissible in court. But they are already making the rounds in the court of public opinion, which can influence everything from fundraising efforts to the mind-set of potential jurors in Mr. Zimmerman's murder trial.

    • 5.7-magnitude earthquake shakes Northern Calif

      GREENVILLE, Calif. (AP) — A magnitude 5.7 earthquake was widely felt as it rattled Northern California Thursday night, breaking dishes and shaking mirrors off walls. But authorities said there were no immediate reports of injury or serious damage.

    • Michelle Obama vacation: Will critics slam this trip too?

      Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia are looking at an extended vacation on Martha’s Vineyard this summer, according to a report in The Boston Globe. The Globe might have something here – it’s almost a local Vineyard paper, after all.

    • Woman accused of contaminating daughter's IV tubes

      TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — A prosecutor says a woman on trial in Tucson contaminated her hospitalized infant daughter's intravenous lines in an attempt to get attention from the girl's father.

    Loading...

    Follow Yahoo! News