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Obama responded during his appearance on Letterman's show. "One thing I've learned as president is that you represent the entire country," he said, adding, "There are not a lot of people out there who think they are victims." On Wednesday, the Obama-supporting super PAC Priorities USA Action began running the first TV ad using clips from the Romney fundraiser. The ad closes with a narrator saying Romney will never convince middle-class voters he's on their side. Republicans said Romney need to sharpen his argument and make clear that he was being inclusive by promoting policies that would help all Americans regardless of their circumstances. "He's got a tax policy that will drive economic growth and economic growth will help everybody," said Republican pollster David Winston, who has worked closely with House Republican leaders. "That's his challenge
-- to lay out that argument." In an op-ed essay in Wednesday's USA Today, Romney tried to do just that. "My course for the American economy will encourage private investment and personal freedom," Romney wrote. "Instead of creating a web of dependency, I will pursue policies that grow our economy and lift Americans out of poverty." But in his Fox interview Tuesday, Romney continued to cast a segment of the country as unable to rally around his tax-cutting message. "I recognize that those people who are not paying income tax are going to say, `Gosh, this provision that Mitt keeps talking about lowering income taxes, that's not going to be real attractive to them,'" Romney said. "And those that are dependent upon government and those that think government's job is to redistribute, I'm not going to get them." Some Republicans distanced themselves from him. "I disagree with Governor Romney's insinuation that 47 percent of Americans believe they are victims who must depend on the government for their care," Linda McMahon, the Republican candidate for a Senate seat in Connecticut, said in a statement posted to her website. Sen. Scott Brown, in a tough race for re-election in heavily Democratic Massachusetts, said of Romney's comments, "That's not the way I view the world." And New Mexico's Republican governor, Susana Martinez, reacting to Romney's remarks, noted that many in New Mexico live at or below the poverty level, and "that safety net is a good thing." On Wednesday, the Romney campaign is releasing two television ads accusing the Obama administration of conducting a "war on coal." The ads come one day after Virginia-based Alpha Natural Resources disclosed that it is closing mines in Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania and eliminating 1,200 jobs. Alpha CEO Kevin Crutchfield blamed the shutdowns, in part, on "a regulatory environment that's aggressively aimed at constraining the use of coal."
[Associated
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