Romney Continues to Hammer Obama on Welfare

 

Mitt Romney continued to hammer President Obama on welfare on Monday, releasing a new TV ad that alleges the president has opposed the work requirement for welfare.

“Barack Obama has a long history of opposing work for welfare,” a voice-over says before the ad cuts to a clip of Obama from 1998 saying that he was not a “supporter of the federal plan that was signed in 1996” by former President Bill Clinton. 

The ad claims Obama ended work requirements for welfare in July, referring to a memo from Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius saying the administration was willing to waive federal work requirements for state welfare programs if they came up with their own plans to improve employment outcomes.

“You wouldn't have to work, and wouldn't have to train for a job,” the voice-over said.

The ad continues a line of attack Romney and the Republican National Committee have used for the past several weeks, starting with a spot that used Clinton and his 1996 welfare reform bill to attack Obama stance on the issue.

The Obama campaign has responded to the attacks, calling the claims “dubious” and hitting Romney for being “flexible on welfare and the truth.” Clinton himself has also called the ad campaign “not true.”