In making the risky choice of Rep. Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney seals the deal on Koch brothers' party takeover.
Tea Party heartthrob Rep Paul Ryan crafted budget designed to cripple Obama's agenda and paralyze U.S. government programs.

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It's official: The Republican Party is now officially a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Koch brothers' political enterprise. How else to explain Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's pick of Rep. Paul Ryan, Wis., as his running mate. Yes, that Paul Ryan -- chairman of the House Budget Committee and author of the infamous Ryan roadmap budget plan, which promises to turn Medicare into a privatized voucher system, and yank health care from millions of children whose parents happen to be poor. And that's just the beginning. In addition to a raft of cuts, the Ryan plan would end the Earned Income Tax Credit, which millions of parents count on.
It's a plan that even former House Speaker Newt Gingrich deemed too "radical." Asked by NBC's David Gregory to respond to Ryan's proposal, Gingrich famously said (video): "I don't think right-wing social engineering is any more desirable than left-wing social engineering. I don't think imposing radical change from the right or the left is a very good way for a free society to operate."
(Of course that was before Gingrich walked back those remarks, apparently reminded by some savvy operative that he might not want to anger the Kochs, to whom Ryan, 42, is something of a youthful ward, having been the beneficiary of years of support from the Koch-founded Americans For Prosperity. To learn more about the Koch brothers go here.)
Out to break Labour
In case anyone should miss the point that Ryan is a very Kochy guy, Romney did his big reveal of running mate Ryan Saturday morning aboard the U.S.S. Wisconsin, a decommissioned ship docked in the all-important swing state of Virginia. However important Virginia is to the electoral math, Wisconsin is a highly symbolic icon for the Tea Party. It's not only Ryan's home state; it's the poster state of right-wing triumph, the place where Gov. Scott Walker successfully fended off a recall attempt made by progressives in response to a bill he rammed through the state legislature that all but ended collective bargaining for the state's public employees. Much of the credit for Wisconsin's right turn goes to Americans For Prosperity, which boasts a particularly aggressive Wisconsin chapter, which began building a network of activists there in 2005.
Ryan's association with the group goes back almost that far. In 2008, he was granted the Wisconsin AFP chapter's "Defending the American Dream" award, handed to him by a young county executive who served as emcee for those festivities -- a guy named Scott Walker. Since then, he has made countless appearances on the group's behalf, at anti-health-care reform rallies on Capitol Hill, on conference town halls across the country and at Americans For Prosperity and Americans For Prosperity Foundation events. (Just enter Ryan's name into the search engine on the Americans For Prosperity website, and you'll come up with eight pages of citations.)
In fact, Ryan was due to speak at last week's conference sponsored by the AFP Foundation in Washington, D.C., forcing increased speculation about his running mate prospects when he failed to show.
Tea Toadyers
For Romney, the pluses in picking Ryan are these: the Tea Partiers, who are less than wild about Mittens, really love them some Paul Ryan -- as does David Koch, who will be seated as a Romney delegate at the Republican National Convention in Tampa. Koch and his brother, Charles -- the multi-billionaire owners of Koch Industries, the second largest privately held corporation in the U.S. -- are major donors, not only to political candidates, but to a range of right-wing think tanks and groups. In the post-Citizens United world, those donations add up to millions in political advertisements by all manner of non-profit groups. Already, Americans For Prosperity has made a $27 million air-time buy for running anti-Obama ads.
Romney already owes some of his success in the primary season to Koch's favorite politicians in Wisconsin. Remember Rick Santorum? Right-wing base types -- Christian evangelicals and Tea Partiers -- just loved him. He was giving Romney a whole lotta agita during the primaries -- first stealing Romney's reported win in the Iowa caucuses back from the Mittster in a recount, and nearly besting Romney in Michigan, where Romney grew up.
In the weeks leading up to the Wisconsin primary, Santorum was running double-digits ahead of Romney. But then Paul Ryan endorsed Romney, and so did the Koch-funded U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson. When Ryan began campaigning with Romney in the final days of the campaign, the crowds at Romney events seemed to swell. While conventional wisdom holds that endorsements don't amount to a hill of beans, conventional wisdom had an epic #FAIL on Wisconsin's primary night, when 60 per cent of those responding in exit polls said that Romney's endorsers influenced their vote. (Romney also won the endorsements of a number of Americans For Prosperity-backed state legislators.)
Risky Ryan
But Romney's Ryan pick is not without its minuses, the largest one being running with a guy who has promised to end Medicare and replace it with something else entirely that could wind up costing seniors big-time. Don't be fooled by the fact that Ryan calls his voucher-health-care system for seniors "Medicare." That's just a trick -- like an employer who promises you dental coverage that amounts to a coupon for a discount on a visit to your favourite dentist. As Raw Story's Sahil Kahur noted last year, under Ryan's Not-Medicare "Medicare" plan, seniors would pay significantly more for their health care, according to an analysis by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office.
Specifically, by 2030, seniors under the GOP's transformed program would pay 68 per cent of what they'd pay in the private market -- up from 25 per cent in the status quo scenario.
Of course, photos of the children who would lose health care under the Ryan plan would probably not play well for Romney, either. Democracy Corps, the polling outfit run by Stan Greenberg and James Carville, found Ryan budget to be a drag on Romney's prospects for moving swing voters into his column. (Greenberg refers to the key Obama coalition of unmarried women, youth, and minority voters as the "Rising American Electorate.") From their latest memo, issued in July:
The Ryan budget's impact on the most vulnerable is powerful among key swing voters, including unmarried women, who shifted a net 10 points toward Obama, the Rising American Electorate (net three-point shift), and independents (net nine-point shift). Even conservatives were swayed, shifting a net 13 points toward Obama.
Among those who heard an even split of facts about the Ryan budget -- including ones about cuts to programs aimed to help mostly lower and working class families -- the shift is even more pronounced. With this group of voters, Obama leads Romney by nine points, 52 to 43 per cent, the largest margin of any of the groups in our experiment. It's clear that focusing on what the Ryan budget does to the most vulnerable Americans can pay dividends for Obama.
Looks like the Koch brothers are going to have to throw a whole lot of money at this thing to make it work for them. But we know they've got plenty of that. ![[Tyee]](http://thetyee.cachefly.net/ui/img/ico_fishie.png)
Adele M. Stan covers U.S. politics for Alternet, where this article first appeared.
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Hakuin
44 weeks ago
I wonder when the Americans
Are going to switch from assassinating politicians to billionaires? In view of their track record I think it inevitable.
Van Isle
44 weeks ago
I have known and worked with
I have known and worked with a lot of Americans and most of them are smart and decent people. Collectively it seems they're a bunch of screw-ups when it comes to politics. Sometimes I wonder about us Canadians; if we're following down the same path of stupidity?
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
"if"?
[INSENSITIVE COMMENT BORDERING ON RACIST REMOVED. -MODERATOR.]
Booker
44 weeks ago
big fight
Randroid Ryan is the candidate that the Democrats hoped Romney would chose. He illustrates the "class warfare" of the American aristocracy very clearly. The Yanks will have a clear choice to make this fall and there is little nuance in this contest now. Interesting times.
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
yes, a "black and white" choice
, one might say.
Birch
44 weeks ago
It's pretty clear!
We ARE following down the same path of stupidity. We've elected Stephen Harper prime minister three times now, most recently with a majority (even if it's only a 26% majority). His ideas about political economy are front and center tea party-ish.
Just how bad things have to get before we reverse course is the important question now.
Birch
44 weeks ago
Canada is following the same path.
We've elected Harper three times. His ideas of political economy are distinctly tea party-ish. He once said that we wouldn't recognize this country when he is through with it.
The most important question now is how to get him out.
Murray Stone
44 weeks ago
odd ticket
Here we have a white guy born with a silver spoon his mouth in Michigan, selecting as his running mate a white guy born with a silver spoon in his mouth in Wisconsin. Mitt has a tax plan that is not only politically unattractive but nonsensical from an accounting viewpoint. Ryan has a budget that would reduce his and Mitt's marginal tax rate to less than 1%, while Mitt won't reveal his tax returns or how he uses his offshore investment and bank accounts.
So what's in it for them? Possibly they can deflect criticism of each other's plans: "I don't support everything in his ghastly program, just as he doesn't support everything in mine--but together we're an unbeatable combination." Some wise person says this is the new normal in US politics--hard to argue with.
Dan the socialist
44 weeks ago
Why does the article not
Why does the article not mention how Romney and Ryan both are Israel butt kissers?
The US president is really the VP of Israel....
RickW
44 weeks ago
Doesn't Ryan Bear a Resemblance to Alfred E. Newman?
And why don't Americans realize that EVERY Republican government has increased debt and increased bureaucracy? (of course, the same thing happens here in the Great White North as well).....
Dungeness_Crab
44 weeks ago
More like Eddie Munster, really...
;)
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
ya think?
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-2cAVQPahR-4/Th46_vyzu0I/AAAAAAAAAIA/6DGCoT-2vtc/s1600/Eddie+Munster.jpg
OwlRol
44 weeks ago
Assassiwhat?
"switch from assassinating politicians to billionaires?"
Dave and Charly, probably a bad idea. But someone will likely try to assassinate Mitt, the combo billionaire presidrnt.
Paul Ryan, a possible VP, might then run the show.
Then again, Ryan may prefer not to play the big role, rather mimic the Dick Cheney method under both Bush administrations.
Interesting times, hopefully no more significant than Stuart-Colbert reports, but...
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, say what?
Fiat lux
44 weeks ago
Back at the ranch we say that
Back at the ranch we say that sometimes it takes insane rulers to wake people up and start asking question on what the hell is really going on ?
Unless they profess to be real "conservatives", of course, which makes any level of awakening virtually impossible.
Like the fools who believe the crooks who claim that tax cuts for the 1% "create jobs". They sure hell do. In communist China and kiddie slave labour India.
Ed Deak.
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
say Ed,
what do you think of this, particularly the comments:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/video/2012/aug/14/after-capitalism-john-holloway-anti-worlds
Fiat lux
44 weeks ago
Nice dream, but the minute
Nice dream, but the minute anybody says the word "communism" as any form of praise, the person is finished.
I have seen communism, the lives and ecology destroyed by that crime wave, as I am seeing now the same leaders enslaving the world under the fraud of capitalism.
Yes, there will be a world after capitalism , but not under anything like communism, unless humanity intends to completely destroy itself.
Ed Deak.
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
what if they called it
"communalism"?
MEW
44 weeks ago
Canada's tax cuts create jobs
in Haiti, Honduras, Columbia and Mexico. Free trade even if it takes "soft" coups to get it seems to be our governments guiding principal.
As well the American companies are drooling at the prospect of getting the kind of tax cuts Harper is implementing here.
Okanagan Orchardist
44 weeks ago
Although I think assassination is not always a good idea,
(note the wording), I always wondered why Dick Cheney was never assassinated.
Although I have traveled all over the world, I have tended to stay away from the US whenever possible. Perhaps my distaste of the USA is centered on its politics and its political system (blame that on my Poly Sc 200 prof a 100 years ago), but everything I read about them from their religious fanatics to their politicians to the people that run (literally) their politicians, upsets me. Susan Jacoby's book 'THE AGE OF AMERICAN UNREASON' in which she describes the "dumbing down" of American culture and in which she explains why Americans have become so, well, dumb, explains it well. That's a generalization, of course, and we could apply it equally to all the, well, dumb voters that put their X's next to a Conservative MP in the last Federal election.
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
Why?
Because its dextrocardia situs inversus is a state secret; all attempts failed when the stake struck nothing.
DonValley
44 weeks ago
OO
"Although I have traveled all over cthe world...."
Most Canadians would spell it 'travelled'. I am truly disturbed about the colour of your behaviour.
Regardless of the fact that the Tyee uses an American dictionary in their spell check programs, I am nonetheless disturbed. Canada is Canada, and if you won't participate then why not just leave?
the-grouse
44 weeks ago
Taking the Country Back
I guess when Ryan and his running mate blather about it being time to take "our" country back, they are speaking, basically as agents for the Koch brothers.
Hakuin
44 weeks ago
I see Ryan
was voted "Biggest Brown-Noser" in his high school days by his class mates. I believe that's all we really need to know.