CAMPAIGN 2012

Ryan Primes Colorado Audiences for Foreign-Policy Debate

VP candidate rips Obama on military spending and other issues in key swing state.

Updated: October 22, 2012 | 2:23 p.m.
October 22, 2012 | 11:44 a.m.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Before Mitt Romney takes the stage in Monday night’s foreign-policy debate against President Obama, his running mate Paul Ryan is seeking to bolster the Republican nominee by burnishing his foreign-policy credentials and suggesting that Obama is projecting weakness.

“The president himself acknowledged on TV a few weeks ago that he can’t change Washington from the inside,” Ryan said, in reference to an interview the president gave to Univision in September. It’s a line that he frequently trots out on the campaign trail, but he added a new spin while speaking on Sunday in Colorado Springs, which has a major military presence. “If he can’t honor the men and women who put the uniform on by giving us a strong military, then I say we change presidents.”

Ryan is campaigning across Colorado on Monday with events in Pueblo, Durango, and Grand Junction.

Vice President Joe Biden also talked up his running mate's foreign policy credentials while blasting those of their rival's. Campaigning on Monday in Canton, Ohio, Biden pointed to the tariffs that the administration slapped on Chinese tire imports three years ago, a move that Romney opposed.

"This is the guy who is running ads here non-stop in Ohio saying he is going to get tough on China. C'mon man, C'mon man, please," Biden said.

The last of the three debates is expected to be the most challenging for Romney because of the focus on foreign policy, an area in which Obama has held a strong edge in polling. Ryan sought to prime the audience by saying that the president has embraced the $550 billion in defense spending cuts that are slated be implemented in January 2013 if Congress fails to reach agreement on other spending cuts to offset the increase in the debt ceiling from last summer.

Ryan voted for the bill to raise the debt ceiling that included the cuts, but has offered legislation to defer them, though his measure received no Democratic support when it passed the House in late July.

He also recalled the instance during which Obama was caught on a hot mic telling then-outgoing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev that he would have “more flexibility” to deal with missile defense after the November elections.

“When you see your president whispering to the president of Russia, when he thinks no one is listening, he’ll have more flexibility on missile defense, it begs the question: How much more does he want to give away?” Ryan asked.

Ryan said that he and Romney would pursue a very different style of foreign policy. “We are safe, we keep prosperity when America’s military is strong and when our president speaks with resolve and clarity. That’s the kind of president Mitt Romney will be,” he said.

If Romney can hold his own in the debate on Monday evening, it could help give him the edge in states like Colorado, where a CBS News/New York Times/Quinnipiac poll taken in early October showed him leading the president by just 1 point.

Rodney Hawkins contributed

Get the latest news and analysis delivered to your inbox. Sign up for National Journal's morning alert, Wake-Up Call, and afternoon newsletter, The Edge. Subscribe here.


Leave A Comment
The National Journal Group has the right (but not the obligation) to monitor the comments and to remove any materials it deems inappropriate.
Comments powered by Disqus
Follow National Journal
Related Content
Most Read Articles
Columns
Charlie Cook: The Cook Report

Republicans Should Go Easy on Obama, At Least in Public

May 16, 2013
As a tactical matter, a subterranean campaign will score more direct hits on the president.
Ronald Brownstein: Political Connections

How the White House Scandals Could Hurt Republicans, Too

May 16, 2013
By enraging the base and strengthening the faction least willing to compromise with Obama, the IRS and Benghazi affairs could hurt a GOP shot at the presidency.
Norm Ornstein: Washington Inside Out

Eric Cantor’s Caucus Thwarts His Push for an Alternative Agenda

May 16, 2013
Cantor has learned that the tea-party movement he helped foster won’t fall in line behind his efforts to push an alternative conservative agenda.
More Columns »