associated press dems sharpen attack as gop rallies...

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New Spring and Summer Hours Begining April 2, 2012 Monday and Tuesday 6 AM - 2 PM Wednesday and Thursday 6 AM - 8 PM Friday 6 AM - 9 PM Saturday 6 AM - 2 PM Sunday 6 AM - 2 PM 3660 W. KY 10 • Tollesboro, Ky (606) 798-4500 Daily Plate Lunch Specials Friday Night is Steak Night Breakfast Served Anytime We will be Closed Easter Sunday Mason County Alumni Association Quarter Auction Benefiting the Mason County Alumni Association Scholarship Fund Thursday April 5, 2012 DONATIONS MADE BY: Fantastic Sam’s, Wal-Mart, Harry Mann, Moyer’s Winery, MSU, Golden Dragon, Carol Jeans Flowers, Pasquale’s, Lee Famous Recipes, Chandler’s, Pizza Hut, DeSha’s, Sonic, Burger King, Arby’s, Poor Bob’s Deli, Caproni’s, Valero, Ron and Norllae Rice, Reflections on Main, Kroger, Spectrum Graphics, MCTCS Bookstore, Betty Groh, Horch Landscaping, Traxel’s, Tammy Brown Photography, The Home Frame Shop, City of Maysville, Merle Norman’s, Whitney’s Fine Jewelry, Bowie Tires All Proceeds Benefit The Mason County Alumni Scholarship Fund Auction conducted by the “Fleming County Quarter Auction Gang” Several vendors and MUCH, MUCH, MORE! $1.00 Per Paddle Food will be available for purchase Sponsors/Auction Items 3-UK framed prints (2 are signed by Darius Miller) Large Maysville Framed Print Large Barn Quilt Tons of area restaurant and business gift certificates 2 scoops of mulch including delivery EXPERT Landscape Planning & Installation Now is the time for Spring mulching, landscape installations and adding your outdoor lighting. Call today for a Free Consultation! 606-564-3038 Shopping? We’re your Shield. We’re your Shelter. ShelterInsurance.com 1-800-Shelter Tonya Gray 901 US Hwy 68, Suite 100 Maysville, KY 606-564-7400 Across from McDonald’s What a find! At Shelter Insurance ® , we pride ourselves on helping folks like you get the right auto insurance coverage at the best rate possible. Call, click or come see us to find out how our shield can help protect you! BETH FOUHY AND STEVE PEOPLES Associated Press MILWAUKEE | Presi- dent Barack Obama’s ad- ministration launched a multi-pronged assault on Mitt Romney’s values and foreign policy credentials Sunday, while a fresh set of prominent Republi- cans rallied behind the GOP front-runner as the odds-on nominee, further signs the general election is overtaking the primary season. A defiant Rick Santorum outlined plans to leave Wisconsin the day before the state’s contest Tues- day, an indication that the conservative favorite may be in retreat, his chances to stop Romney rapidly dwindling. “I think the chances are overwhelming that (Rom- ney) will be our nominee,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” ‘’It seems to me we’re in the final phases of wrapping up this nomination. And most of the members of the Sen- ate Republican conference are either supporting him, or they have the view that I do, that it’s time to turn our attention to the fall campaign and begin to make the case against the president of the United States.” Both Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden went after Romney Sunday, underscoring the belief inside Obama’s Chicago re-election headquar- ters that Romney will — sooner than later — secure the right to face Obama this fall. Their involve- ment comes as both sides sharpen their general election strategy, perhaps weeks before the GOP contest formally comes to an end. “I think Gov. Romney’s a little out of touch,” Biden told CBS’ “Face the Nation” in an interview broadcast Sunday. “I can’t remember a presidential candidate in the recent past who seems not to un- derstand, by what he says, what ordinary middle- class people are thinking about and are concerned about.” The line of attack is likely to play prominently in the Obama campaign’s general election narrative. While Obama is a mil- lionaire, Romney would be among the nation’s wealthiest presidents ever elected. And he’s opened himself to criti- cism through a series of missteps. Romney casually bet a rival $10,000 during a presidential debate, noted that his wife drives a “couple of Cadillacs,” and lists owners of profession- al sports teams among his friends. His personal tax records show investments in the Cayman Islands and a Swiss bank account. Obama’s team on Sun- day also seized on Rom- ney’s foreign policy inex- perience. Biden said Obama was “stating the obvious” when he told Russian President Dmitry Med- vedev that he would have more latitude on missile defense after the Novem- ber general election. The two presidents did not re- alize the exchange, during a meeting in Seoul, South Korea, last weekend, was being picked up by a mi- crophone. Romney called it “alarming” and part of a pattern of “breathtaking weakness” with America’s foes. He asked what else Obama would be flexible on if he were to win a sec- ond term. “Speaking of flexible, Gov. Romney’s a pretty flexible guy on his posi- tions,” Biden said. Rom- ney’s GOP opponents have accused the former Mas- sachusetts governor of “flip-flopping” on issues such as health care and abortion. Clinton seized on Rom- ney’s comment that Rus- sia is America’s “No. 1 geopolitical foe,” calling the statement “dated” and suggesting there were more pressing matters of concern in global affairs. “I think it’s somewhat dated to be looking back- wards instead of being realistic about where we agree, where we don’t agree,” Clinton told CNN Sunday. “He just seems to be uninformed or stuck in a Cold War mentality,” Biden added. “It exposes how little the governor knows about foreign policy.” But the administration’s comments may have been overshadowed Sunday by Romney’s ballooning Re- publican support. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., spent the weekend at Romney’s side campaign- ing across Wisconsin, one of three states to host Republican primaries Tuesday. First-term Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., fol- lowed Ryan’s lead Sunday morning. “I’m coming out urging the voters of Wisconsin: ‘Let’s lead. Let’s show that this is the time to bring this process to an end so we can focus our atten- tion on retiring President Obama,’” Johnson said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He later appeared at a pancake brunch with Romney and offered a message to “every con- servative”: “I’ve spoken with Mitt, I totally believe he is committed to saving America.” The senator joins a growing chorus of promi- nent Republicans calling for the party to coalesce behind Romney’s candi- dacy. Romney also scored former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and his father, Presi- dent George H.W. Bush, in recent days. Ryan’s endorsement was particularly painful for Santorum, who had been aggressively prais- ing the congressman — a fiscal conservative hero in Wisconsin and across the country — for much of the past week. That praise ended Saturday, when Santorum referred to Ryan as “some other Wiscon- sinite.” Santorum’s senior staff outlined an increasingly unlikely path to victory that depends upon hypo- thetical success more than a month away. “May is going to be a good month for us,” San- torum campaign manager Mike Biundo said. “The race goes on.” Biundo confirmed that Santorum is aggressively working the phones to sway delegates in states like Washington, Iowa, Minnesota and Missouri that have already voted. But he’s having mixed success. “We have some (del- egates) that have commit- ted. I think most people seem to right now still be kind of waiting it out. There seems to be a lot of that that’s going on,” Bi- undo said. Santorum was publicly defiant Sunday. “Look, this race isn’t even at halftime yet,” he told “Fox News Sunday.” He said Romney “hasn’t been able to close the deal with conservatives, much less anybody else in this party. And that’s not going to be an effective tool for us to win this election.” But with losses piling up for in other industrial states like Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, Santorum acknowledged the results in Wisconsin Tuesday will send a “strong signal” about the direction of the Republican contest. And he appears to in retreat. Having devoted more than a week to campaign- ing across Wisconsin, Santorum is scheduled to return to his home state, Pennsylvania, the day before the Wisconsin contest. Pennsylvania’s primary is more than three weeks away. Biundo noted that Santorum moved out of Louisiana — where he won — before that state’s elec- tion day. But Santorum’s team has demonstrated far less confidence in recent days about Wisconsin than Romney, who has predicted victory here. Trying to be upbeat, Santorum dismissed Rom- ney’s growing support as “panic” in the Republican establishment and said seeing “everybody sort of coming out of the wood- work to say the things they’re saying today makes me feel like we’re actually doing pretty well here in Wisconsin.” Meanwhile, Romney hopes to score a knockout blow in Pennsylvania, which hosts its primary April 24. He already has an office in Harrisburg and four paid staffers in the state, and plans to shift additional resources there after Tuesday. With about half of the GOP nominating con- tests complete, Romney has won 54 percent of the delegates at stake, putting him on track to reach the threshold 1,144 national convention delegates in June. Santorum, who has won 27 percent of the delegates at stake, would need to win 74 percent of the remaining delegates to clinch the nomination. Dems sharpen attack as GOP rallies behind Romney ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, shakes hands with U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Chairman of the House Budget Committee, right, before speaking with supporters of Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker at a phone bank during a campaign stop in Fitchburg, Wis., Saturday. The phone bank is used in support of Walker who is facing a recall election in June. A10 | MONDAY, 04.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT A10 | NATION + WORLD MONDAY, 04.2.2012 | THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT

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Page 1: ASSOCIATED PRESS Dems sharpen attack as GOP rallies …nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7jdf6k1h5k/data/10_70190_LI04022012A10.pdfin the Obama campaign’s general election narr ative. While Obama

A10 | MONDAY, 04.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT

New Spring and Summer HoursBegining April 2, 2012

Monday and Tuesday 6 AM - 2 PMWednesday and Thursday 6 AM - 8 PM

Friday 6 AM - 9 PMSaturday 6 AM - 2 PMSunday 6 AM - 2 PM

3660 W. KY 10 • Tollesboro, Ky(606) 798-4500

Daily Plate Lunch SpecialsFriday Night is Steak NightBreakfast Served Anytime

We will be Closed Easter Sunday

Mason County Alumni Association

Quarter AuctionBenefi ting the Mason County Alumni Association Scholarship Fund

Thursday April 5, 2012

DONATIONS MADE BY: Fantastic Sam’s, Wal-Mart, Harry Mann, Moyer’s Winery, MSU, Golden Dragon,

Carol Jeans Flowers, Pasquale’s, Lee Famous Recipes, Chandler’s, Pizza Hut, DeSha’s, Sonic, Burger King, Arby’s, Poor Bob’s Deli, Caproni’s, Valero, Ron and Norllae Rice,

Refl ections on Main, Kroger, Spectrum Graphics, MCTCS Bookstore, Betty Groh, Horch Landscaping, Traxel’s, Tammy Brown Photography, The Home Frame Shop,

City of Maysville, Merle Norman’s, Whitney’s Fine Jewelry, Bowie TiresAll Proceeds Benefit The Mason County Alumni Scholarship FundAuction conducted by the “Fleming County Quarter Auction Gang”

Several vendors and MUCH, MUCH, MORE!

$1.00 Per Paddle

Food will be available for purchase

Sponsors/Auction Items3-UK framed prints

(2 are signed by Darius Miller)

Large Maysville Framed Print

Large Barn Quilt

Tons of area restaurant and business gift certifi cates

2 scoops of mulch including delivery

EXPERTLandscape Planning

& InstallationNow is the time for Spring

mulching, landscape installations and adding your outdoor lighting.

Call today for a Free Consultation!

606-564-3038

Shopping?

We’re your Shield. We’re your Shelter.ShelterInsurance.com

1-800-Shelter

Tonya Gray901 US Hwy 68,

Suite 100Maysville, KY606-564-7400

Across from McDonald’s

What a find!At Shelter Insurance®, we pride ourselveson helping folks likeyou get the rightauto insurancecoverage at thebest rate possible.

Call, click or comesee us to find outhow our shield canhelp protect you!

BETH FOUHY AND STEVE PEOPLESAssociated Press

MILWAUKEE | Presi-dent Barack Obama’s ad-ministration launched a multi-pronged assault on Mitt Romney’s values and foreign policy credentials Sunday, while a fresh set of prominent Republi-cans rallied behind the GOP front-runner as the odds-on nominee, further signs the general election is overtaking the primary season.

A defiant Rick Santorum outlined plans to leave Wisconsin the day before the state’s contest Tues-day, an indication that the conservative favorite may be in retreat, his chances to stop Romney rapidly dwindling.

“I think the chances are overwhelming that (Rom-ney) will be our nominee,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” ‘’It seems to me we’re in the final phases of wrapping up this nomination. And most of the members of the Sen-ate Republican conference are either supporting him, or they have the view that I do, that it’s time to turn our attention to the fall

campaign and begin to make the case against the president of the United States.”

Both Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice President Joe Biden went after Romney Sunday, underscoring the belief inside Obama’s Chicago re-election headquar-ters that Romney will — sooner than later — secure the right to face Obama this fall. Their involve-ment comes as both sides sharpen their general election strategy, perhaps weeks before the GOP contest formally comes to an end.

“I think Gov. Romney’s a little out of touch,” Biden told CBS’ “Face the Nation” in an interview broadcast Sunday. “I can’t remember a presidential candidate in the recent past who seems not to un-derstand, by what he says, what ordinary middle-class people are thinking about and are concerned about.”

The line of attack is likely to play prominently in the Obama campaign’s general election narrative. While Obama is a mil-lionaire, Romney would be among the nation’s wealthiest presidents ever elected. And he’s opened himself to criti-cism through a series of missteps.

Romney casually bet

a rival $10,000 during a presidential debate, noted that his wife drives a “couple of Cadillacs,” and lists owners of profession-al sports teams among his friends. His personal tax records show investments in the Cayman Islands and a Swiss bank account.

Obama’s team on Sun-day also seized on Rom-ney’s foreign policy inex-perience.

Biden said Obama was “stating the obvious” when he told Russian President Dmitry Med-vedev that he would have more latitude on missile defense after the Novem-ber general election. The two presidents did not re-alize the exchange, during a meeting in Seoul, South Korea, last weekend, was being picked up by a mi-crophone.

Romney called it “alarming” and part of a pattern of “breathtaking weakness” with America’s foes. He asked what else Obama would be flexible on if he were to win a sec-ond term.

“Speaking of flexible, Gov. Romney’s a pretty flexible guy on his posi-tions,” Biden said. Rom-ney’s GOP opponents have accused the former Mas-sachusetts governor of “flip-flopping” on issues such as health care and abortion.

Clinton seized on Rom-ney’s comment that Rus-sia is America’s “No. 1 geopolitical foe,” calling the statement “dated” and suggesting there were more pressing matters of concern in global affairs.

“I think it’s somewhat dated to be looking back-wards instead of being realistic about where we agree, where we don’t agree,” Clinton told CNN Sunday.

“He just seems to be uninformed or stuck in a Cold War mentality,” Biden added. “It exposes how little the governor knows about foreign

policy.”But the administration’s

comments may have been overshadowed Sunday by Romney’s ballooning Re-publican support.

Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., spent the weekend at Romney’s side campaign-ing across Wisconsin, one of three states to host Republican primaries Tuesday. First-term Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., fol-lowed Ryan’s lead Sunday morning.

“I’m coming out urging the voters of Wisconsin: ‘Let’s lead. Let’s show that this is the time to bring this process to an end so we can focus our atten-tion on retiring President Obama,’” Johnson said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

He later appeared at a pancake brunch with Romney and offered a message to “every con-servative”: “I’ve spoken with Mitt, I totally believe he is committed to saving America.”

The senator joins a growing chorus of promi-nent Republicans calling for the party to coalesce behind Romney’s candi-dacy. Romney also scored former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and his father, Presi-dent George H.W. Bush, in recent days.

Ryan’s endorsement was particularly painful for Santorum, who had been aggressively prais-ing the congressman — a fiscal conservative hero in Wisconsin and across the country — for much of the past week. That praise ended Saturday, when Santorum referred to Ryan as “some other Wiscon-sinite.”

Santorum’s senior staff outlined an increasingly unlikely path to victory that depends upon hypo-thetical success more than a month away.

“May is going to be a good month for us,” San-torum campaign manager Mike Biundo said. “The race goes on.”

Biundo confirmed that Santorum is aggressively working the phones to sway delegates in states like Washington, Iowa, Minnesota and Missouri that have already voted. But he’s having mixed success.

“We have some (del-egates) that have commit-ted. I think most people seem to right now still be kind of waiting it out. There seems to be a lot of that that’s going on,” Bi-undo said.

Santorum was publicly defiant Sunday.

“Look, this race isn’t even at halftime yet,” he told “Fox News Sunday.” He said Romney “hasn’t been able to close the deal with conservatives, much less anybody else in this party. And that’s not going to be an effective tool for us to win this election.”

But with losses piling up for in other industrial states like Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, Santorum acknowledged the results in Wisconsin Tuesday will send a “strong signal” about the direction of the Republican contest.

And he appears to in retreat.

Having devoted more than a week to campaign-ing across Wisconsin, Santorum is scheduled to return to his home state, Pennsylvania, the day before the Wisconsin contest. Pennsylvania’s primary is more than three weeks away.

Biundo noted that Santorum moved out of Louisiana — where he won — before that state’s elec-tion day. But Santorum’s team has demonstrated far less confidence in recent days about Wisconsin than Romney, who has predicted victory here.

Trying to be upbeat, Santorum dismissed Rom-ney’s growing support as “panic” in the Republican establishment and said seeing “everybody sort of coming out of the wood-work to say the things they’re saying today makes me feel like we’re actually doing pretty well here in Wisconsin.”

Meanwhile, Romney hopes to score a knockout blow in Pennsylvania, which hosts its primary April 24. He already has an office in Harrisburg and four paid staffers in the state, and plans to shift additional resources there after Tuesday.

With about half of the GOP nominating con-tests complete, Romney has won 54 percent of the delegates at stake, putting him on track to reach the threshold 1,144 national convention delegates in June. Santorum, who has won 27 percent of the delegates at stake, would need to win 74 percent of the remaining delegates to clinch the nomination.

Dems sharpen attack as GOP rallies behind Romney

ASSOCIATED PRESSRepublican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, shakes hands with U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Chairman of the House Budget Committee, right, before speaking with supporters of Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker at a phone bank during a campaign stop in Fitchburg, Wis., Saturday. The phone bank is used in support of Walker who is facing a recall election in June.

A10 | MONDAY, 04.2.2012 THE LEDGER INDEPENDENTA10 | NATION + WORLD MONDAY, 04.2.2012 | THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT