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Republicans engage in Europe-bashing before Iowa scrum

Published 03 January 2012 - Updated 04 January 2012
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Battling for attention ahead of their first election showdown, leading Republican presidential candidates have taken turns accusing one another and President Barack Obama of 'European socialism' and opposing further US financial help for the struggling eurozone.

Declarations of shared values are a habitual feature at almost every meeting and historical commemoration featuring European and American leaders. At the EU-US summit in Washington in November, Obama spoke of "Our common values, our common belief in the rule of law, in democracy, in freedom, in a free market system – all those things bind us together".

But in their bids to prove their right-wing credentials, many Republican candidates are portraying Europe not as a kindred continent, but as the kind of dystopian society the US might become should the wrong person win.

Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor and the best-funded Republican candidate, was typical of the trend. While campaigning in Iowa (see Background) he said: "President Obama wants to make us a European-style welfare state, where instead of being a merit society, we're an entitlement society, where government's role is to take from some and give to others."

"What I know is if they do that, they'll substitute envy for ambition, and they'll poison the very spirit of America and keep us from being one nation under God", he said.

Romney made steady gains in polls leading up to the Iowa Republican caucus - a showcase event for presidential candidates - and enjoys support in the party establishment.

'European socialism'

Romney, who speaks French, has himself been accused by fellow Republicans of favouring 'European' policies. In particular, many consider his 2006 reform of the Massachusetts healthcare system to be similar to Obama's own federal-level health package, which is widely attacked by the party.

Speaking in Iowa in September, Texas Governor Rick Perry attacked Romney as "the model for socialised medicine that has been tried before and it didn't work … It failed miserably whether it was in Western Europe or in Massachusetts."

Romney was also attacked last month when, speaking to the Wall Street Journal, he praised the Swiss healthcare system and expressed openness to a value-added tax, an important revenue source for European governments.

This prompted the presidential campaign spokesperson of Newt Gingrich – who in the 1990s was a congressional leader who famously clashed with President Bill Clinton – to say of Romney: "The fact that he's willing to look at European socialism shows just how far out of the conservative mainstream he is."

No US bailout of eurozone

Republican candidates have also blasted Obama administration efforts to ease the eurozone crisis through the International Monetary Fund and the US Treasury.

Speaking to Italian newspaper La Stampa, Romney said, "The United States must take care of its own crisis, and won't give a dollar to save Europe."

Other Republicans have voiced similar views. Ron Paul – a physician known for his libertarian views – has denounced the US Federal Reserve's cooperation with other central banks to inject liquidity into the European market.

"The Fed is behaving much as it did during the 2008 financial crisis, only this time instead of bailing out politically well-connected too-big-to-fail firms, it is bailing out profligate government spending," Paul  said in November.

Last month, lawmakers in Congress, including 26 of 47 Republican senators, proposed bills that would block the use of US contributions to the IMF in European bailout packages. The IMF receives 17.7% of its funding from the US.

"It's time to stop the bailouts," Republican Senator Jim DeMint said at the time. "After years of mimicking European big government spending, America has lost our AAA rating with a debt of over $15 trillion that's larger than our entire economy."

EurActiv.com

COMMENTS

  • I'm puzzled - a new episode of Monty Python - with Americans and a revised "Upper Class twit of the year" this time in Iowa? Could somebody tell me where I can purchase the DVD.

    By :
    Mike Parr
    - Posted on :
    03/01/2012
  • I must thank Romney that he shared his view about us. Now we "europeans" know what to expect if he becomes the next president of the US. Instead of critize europe he should look to his own country. If he start to do so than he would see that he lives in a "asocial" society where there is no hope for the weakest people.Thank God i'am not living in the United States. Romney could learn someting from the europeans but instead he would like to continue to save the world even if no one ask him to do so.(somebody should start to save the world from the USA) The US live in their own fanatsy world so we europeans should let them live there and keep working in the real world to overcome for example the financial crisis which where triggered by the way by the US.

    By :
    Frederick Vergauwen
    - Posted on :
    04/01/2012
  • As time goes by I become increasingly anti-Republican. Those mentioned in this article represent a party -- not America. I firmly disagree with almost -- if not all -- ideas for which the Republican party in the US stands. There are A LOT of fellow Americans who feel exactly the way I do. Way to generalize, kids...how very ignorant of you.

    By :
    Beth McCalister
    - Posted on :
    04/01/2012
  • As the son of American immigrant parents and a resident of Germany, I find it shameful that American political candidates are relying on anti-Europe sentiment to get elected. Do they not realize that most of the concepts embodied in the U.S. Consititution came from Europe, that German socialism played a major role ending slavery in the U.S., and that less governmental intervention has spawned many of the problems plaguing America today?

    People of strong moral character do not need to denegrate a way of life shared by millions of fellow passengers on this planet.

    By :
    Bob Lelkes
    - Posted on :
    06/01/2012
  • america's establishment hates europe's way of life. the united statws arch enemy on the long run is europe.

    europeans be ware, this will not be an easy ride.

    when are europeans going to realose that their interests are not the same like those of the united states.

    By :
    ahmed sedky
    - Posted on :
    09/01/2012
  • Everyone.. They are trying to win the primary. They must go far right. Romney - who will win, is a smart guy. And he understands global economics. Secondly what can the US learn from Europe? It's not really better over here, less Germany. Further, go into a primary with that rhetoric and you loose.US Politics is a different beast from Europe. I'm from the US and worked for the Democrats and Republicans. In Brussels I've worked at the Commission and Parliament.

    By :
    chandler
    - Posted on :
    14/01/2012
Republican presidential hopefuls Romney, Gingrich and Paul at a debate in Iowa (Reuters/Eric Gay)
Background: 

Republican presidential candidates compete for their party's nomination by winning caucuses and primary elections in the states and territories. There are eight declared Republican candidates vying to challenge President Barack Obama in the November general election.

The first contests are to be held in Iowa (3 January) and New Hampshire (10 January) are important opportunities for individual candidates to differentiate themselves, potentially giving them the momentum necessary to win the nomination. The final primary elections will be held in June.

Voters in these elections tend to more politicised than the country at large. As a result, candidates will often present themselves as more extremist during primary season before adopting more centrist rhetoric for the general election.

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