Obama and Romney have different views of how to handle the economy. Who is more likely to help avoid the next financial crisis, and which would hasten it?
On “Fox News Sunday,” Chris Wallace repeatedly asked Paul Ryan to explain how the math on his tax plan added up. Ryan pretended not to understand Wallace’s question, called the Tax Policy Center study “thoroughly debunked” when it’s not even been dented, and, finally, retreated behind a particularly sad excuse for a politician who built his reputation on explaining policy in understandable terms: “It would take me too long to go through all the math.”
History shows that stock prices and corporate profits have generated stronger growth under Democratic administrations than Republican ones.
Recently, Mitt Romney released his energy platform, drafted from all appearances by Koch Industries, and laying the framework for a major increase in the price of driving.
Is President Obama a job creator? Not yet. But he might be by Election Day. The American economy only has to add another 316,000 jobs to get back to where it was in January 2009, when the president was sworn in.
President Obama wants to help millions of responsible homeowners save hundreds of dollars each month by refinancing their mortgages.
The US economic situation appears to be stabilizing, and some signals actually look good, almost to the point of economic growth.
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