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When Dirty Harry met Clean Mitt

Clint Eastwood put on an odd skit at the Republican National Convention. It was awk-ward to watch, but I have to hand it to Eastwood; he made gaffe-prone Mitt Romney come across as supremely tactful.

Published: Sept. 1, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
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Clint Eastwood put on an odd skit at the Republican National Convention. It was awk-ward to watch, but I have to hand it to Eastwood; he made gaffe-prone Mitt Romney come across as supremely tactful.

Four years ago, when Barack Obama was elected president, Eastwood told the Republican National Convention Thursday night, he thought, “This is great. Everybody was crying. Oprah was crying. I was even crying.”

But with 23 million Americans unemployed and the Obama White House not sufficiently interested in solving the nation’s economic woes, Eastwood concluded, “When somebody does not do their job, you gotta let ’em go.”

“Hope and change had a powerful appeal,” Romney said as he accepted the GOP nomination at the Tampa Bay Press Forum. “But tonight I’d ask a simple question: If you felt that excitement when you voted for Barack Obama, shouldn’t you feel that way now that he’s President Obama?”

Since the economy began to expand in June 2009, median household income in America fell 4.8 percent, according to an analysis of census bureau data. Median household income had fallen from $54,916 in December 2007 to $53,508 in June 2009. That was hard, but things could get worse. Under the Obama recovery, that figure dropped to $50,964 by June 2012. Seniors comprised the only demographic group to see its income rise.

The unemployment rate has exceeded 8 percent since February 2009, yet the president has no plan to get America back to work again. He has proposed ending the Bush tax cuts for the top two percent of income taxpayers. Why? Not because he expects this huge tax increase to create prosperity, but because he thinks the president is supposed to be the fairness czar.

If Obama policies helped, it would be one thing, but as Ann Romney said Tuesday night, the little things, like gas prices and grocery bills, pile up, while “the big things – the good jobs, the chance at college, that home you want to buy – just get harder. Everything has become harder.”

Paul Ryan made the same point Wednesday night with more bite when he said, “College graduates should not have to live out their 20s in their childhood bedrooms, staring up at fading Obama posters and wondering when they can move out and get going with life.”

Debra J. Saunders is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist.

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