Political Hotsheet
By

Sarah B. Boxer, Rebecca Kaplan /

CBS News/ September 21, 2011, 5:28 PM

Romney slams Perry on Social Security in Florida, land of retirees

Mitt Romney and Rick Perry

Mitt Romney, left, and Rick Perry, right.

/ CBS/Getty Images
MIAMI, Fla. - Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney took his attacks on Rick Perry to America's retirement state on Wednesday, drawing comparisons between himself and Ronald Reagan and saying both he and the iconic late president believed in the Social Security program while Perry deems it a failure.

He also took his main rival for the Republican nomination to task for his tendency recently to "wear religion on (his) sleeve." In recent days, the Texas governor had described in highly personal terms his transformation into a Christian during his 20s.

In a state where more than one in five residents is on Social Security, Romney hit Perry hardest on the issue of preserving the federally run retirement savings program. "I think by the measure of the tens of millions of people that rely on Social Security, it's a success," Romney said at a Town Hall-style meeting that attracted about 70 people. "Ronald Reagan believed in Social Security. I believe in Social Security."

His comments, in advance of Saturday's straw poll held by Florida Republicans, elicited a response from Perry, also stumping in Florida.

"Every person who is on Social Security and any individual who has planned their retirement with that, they need to know one thing: America has promised that that program will be there," Perry said after a private fundraiser in Fort Lauderdale. "And for anyone to say differently, particularly someone standing on the Republican stage who wants to be the nominee for the presidency, to imply that the age-old Democrat trick that we're going to go scare our seniors - that's pretty irresponsible."

Perry has described Social Security as a "Ponzi scheme," and Romney pounced on him for it in last week's GOP candidate debate. Perry has since tried to distinguish between preserving the program for current retirees while putting it on more solid financial footing for future retirees.

In a statement, Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan accused Romney of "again sounding like a Democrat, distorting the truth and trying to scare senior citizens. As he has so many times in the past, Mr. Romney seems to forget he's a Republican."

Fielding questions from reporters after the town hall event, Romney complained that, "Some candidates, Rick Perry among them, wear religion on their sleeves and make no apologies about it."

Last week, several thousand people at Liberty University, an evangelical college in Virginia, turned out to hear Perry speak. He used the occasion to describe his hardscrabble upbringing in Texas and his religious awakening as a young man.

Romney is a Mormon, and his religion was an issue in his failed 2008 bid for president. Polls show that this time around it remains an issue for some evangelical Christian voters. Romney said Wednesday, "I think people make their decisions as to who they want to have as president based on a whole series of personal considerations, and I'm not going to try and suggest to the American people how they make those decisions.

"I can tell you that the values of the Judeo-Christian world form an important part of our ethical base and of our legal base. We're based upon those values. ... Those fundamental principles of America I think are appropriate"

Like Perry in recent days, Romney took pains to emphasize his allegiance to Israel in its conflict with the Palestinians at a time the United Nations is considering a Palestinian statehood bid. Apparently referring to President Obama's suggestion that the 1967 borders between the two countries be a starting point for Israeli-Palestinian talks, Romney said, "The president should not be negotiating for his ally, Israel. The president should stand behind Israel. And negotiations and discussions should be held in private if the president has a different view than they do. So my efforts will be talking about the need to stand by our ally."

Perry expressed similar views in New York City earlier this week. Both men are eager to please Jewish voters in the aftermath of an upset special election in New York City, in which Republican Bob Turner prevailed over the Democrat in part by appealing to the district's large pro-Israel Jewish population. Democrats have long been thought to have a lock on Jewish voters.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
10 Comments Add a Comment
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doneinone says:
Let these two keep taking jabs at each other and get their 15 minutes in.......once Christie enters the race they will both be irrelevent.
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zebra8835 says:
Social Security wouldn't be such a "hot button" if it hadn't become so essential for retirement. The day of the traditional pension, (defined benefit) is almost dead being replaced by the 401K, 403B. Retirement was described as a three legged milk stool. One leg your personal savings, another your company pension and lastly your personal savings. Most 401K plans are a very poor substitute for a company pension paying only 3 or 4% of your gross earnings-not much! Then if you invest in mutual funds, you don't have more than the principal amount left in the last ten years and take daily risk with wild market swings. Social Security is an essential part of retirement because the money can't run out, unlike a 401K plan. Any politicians who attack it do so at their own peril.
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aldrich617 says:
If you wear your religion on your sleave, as Rick Perry does,
it is a sign from God that the wearer is probably a hypocrite
of the worst kind. The Founding Fathers knew what they were
doing when they separated church from state.

Seriously, is it even possible for a POLITICIAN FROM TEXAS to
ever live by more than seven of the ten commandments? God has
been punishing Texas for electing Perry as govenor with the
the worst plague of heat waves in living memory.
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todaypost replies:
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" God has been punishing Texas "

if "god" behaves like this, it is no difference between 'god" and a dictator. Don't tell me you believe in dictator.

Texas will survive from "god" and Perry
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lucifersshadow says:
Ron Paul makes these two look like amatuers.
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slappy-mcjohnson replies:
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Indeed.
Birdman04 replies:
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Ron Paul is by far the most consistent, honest & sincere among all of them. It doesn't back down and he tells it like it is like it or not. I admire and respect that.

Those qualities and the fact that he may also be a certified lunatic with awesome ideas makes him unelectable. Darn shame.
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eteamer says:
JR and Willy are just 2 sides of the same coin. And around here we call that a "Plug Nickel".
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newsworthy8 says:
Romney slams Perry, Palin slams Romney, Backmann slams everyone, Ron Paul gets slammed, Boehner slams Obama, Trump slams Obama, Republican slam Democrats, slam, slam, what a waste of energy. Try to do some good for the country instead.
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vpcharan says:
They are two sides of the same penny. I would have said a dime, but dime is of more value than the two combined deserve, realistically.
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