Romney to Obama: "Where are the Jobs?" #AskObama #ObamaIsntWorking

Looks like Romney is participating in today’s Twitter Townhall with the President. Here’s what Mitt asked:

.@BarackObama Where are the jobs? Use #ObamaIsntWorking to #askObama your questions for his town hallless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

Will you go to Twitter and “retweet” this? If we get enough retweets, maybe Obama will consider answering the question. (Wouldn’t bank on it, though.)

Also, you can submit your own questions to @BarackObama by using these hashtags: #askObama and #ObamaIsntWorking

About Luke Gunderson:

Real Estate Enthusiast, Unapologetic Mitt Romney Fan, Sandwich Guru, DMB Lover, Hulu Junkie, Smart Cookie
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One Response to Romney to Obama: "Where are the Jobs?" #AskObama #ObamaIsntWorking

  1. Marilyn says:

    Love it! Where are the jobs? On another note, this excerpt of a column from politico knocks my socks off! Very honest summation.

    With organized labor at the center of several nasty state budget fights, Mitt Romney spoke warmly of unions at a town hall Tuesday.

    “Unions have played a very important role historically in balancing in some cases the egregious actions of some employers and have been important to the development of our economy,” Romney said at a town hall meeting in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, on Tuesday morning.

    The comments put some distance between Romney and his primary opponents’ anti-union rhetoric — and some of his own.

    The former Massachusetts governor was responding to a question from a participant who criticized a recent National Labor Relations Board ruling against Boeing’s decision to locate a plant in South Carolina, a right-to-work state, instead of in union-friendly Washington state.

    “There are some unions that continue to train their workers effectively, their members effectively,” Romney said. “But in some cases, if you will the union bosses — the union CEOs that are running the unions — perhaps put the interests of themselves ahead of the interests of their workers. And that may have been what happened in South Carolina.”