By NBC's Garrett Haake
PALM
BEACH, Fla. — Mitt Romney went well beyond his standard stump speech at
a closed-door fundraiser on Sunday evening, and offered some of the
most specific details to date about the policies he would pursue if
elected.
Karen Bleier / AFP - Getty Images
GOP
presidential hopeful Mitt Romney floated the idea of eliminating the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, the cabinet-level agency
once led by the candidate's father.
In a speech to
donors in the backyard of a private home here, the former Massachusetts
governor and presumptive GOP presidential nominee outlined his plans to
potentially eliminate or consolidate federal agencies, win back Latino
voters and reform the nation's tax code.
And even Ann Romney, the
subject of a national debate last week over the role of women in the
workplace, was more direct than usual. She sounded like a political
tactician when she described a Democratic consultant's criticism of her
decision to be a stay-at-home mom as "an early birthday gift."
Romney went into a level of detail not usually seen by the public in
the speech, which was overheard by reporters on a sidewalk below. One
possibility floated by Romney included the elimination of the Department
of Housing and Urban Development, the Cabinet-level agency once led by
Romney's father, George.
"I'm going to take a lot of departments
in Washington, and agencies, and combine them. Some eliminate, but I'm
probably not going to lay out just exactly which ones are going to go,"
Romney said. "Things like Housing and Urban Development, which my dad
was head of, that might not be around later. But I'm not going to
actually go through these one by one. What I can tell you is, we've got
far too many bureaucrats. I will send a lot of what happens in
Washington back to the states."
Asked about the fate of the
Department of Education in a potential Romney administration, the former
governor suggested it would also face a dramatic restructuring.
"The
Department of Education: I will either consolidate with another agency,
or perhaps make it a heck of a lot smaller. I'm not going to get rid of
it entirely," Romney said, explaining that part of his reasoning behind
preserving the agency was to maintain a federal role in pushing back
against teachers' unions. Romney added that he learned in his 1994
campaign for Senate that proposing to eliminate the agency was
politically volatile.
At that time, Sen. Ted Kennedy ran ads
against Romney — then a political neophyte — accusing him of being
uncaring for saying he wished to eliminate the agency.
Romney told
the audience here tonight (along with the Weekly Standard in an
interview in early April) that that experience remains fresh in his
mind. It's contributed to his caution in publicly naming federal
agencies and programs he would eliminate or dramatically curtail.
Romney's
wife Ann also spoke briefly, where she described her role in a
controversy over women in the workplace and Republicans' efforts to make
inroads with female voters.
Mrs. Romney acknowledged Republicans'
deficit at present with female voters, and urged the women in
attendance to talk to their friends, particularly about the economy. She
also discussed the criticism she faced this week, and her pride in her
role as a mother.
"It was my early birthday present for someone to
be critical of me as a mother, and that was really a defining moment,
and I loved it," Mrs. Romney said.
Gov. Romney went further in engaging the so-called "war on moms" that
followed in the media — upon which his campaign has been aggressively
fundraising — calling it a "gift" that allowed his campaign to show
contrast with Democrats in the general election's first week.
Romney
also went into greater detail than he has on the campaign trail in
describing how he would maintain the progressive structure in the tax
code after implementing his 20 percent across-the-board tax cut.
Democrats
have argued that Romney's tax proposals would disproportionately help
the wealthy, but on Sunday, Romney identified specific loopholes and
deductions for the wealthy that he would eliminate in order to both
finance his tax cut, and ensure that the nation's top earners face the
same tax burden they do today.
"I'm going to probably eliminate
for high income people the second home mortgage deduction," Romney said,
adding that he would also likely eliminate deductions for state income
and property taxes as well.
"By virtue of doing that, we'll get
the same tax revenue, but we'll have lower rates," Romney explained.
"The nice thing about lower rates is that small businesses not get to
keep a larger share of what they're earning and plow it back in to hire
more people and expand their business."
Romney covered much of the
ground he does in his standard stump speech before a crowd of several
dozen donors, who were gathered to contribute to his new general
election "Victory Fund." But Romney also offered, over fried chicken and
snapper, a simpler way of understanding his economic policies.
"I'm
asked — how do you boil it down, how do you encapsulate this into a
campaign message: Two things, jobs and kids," Romney said, explaining
that restarting job growth and preserving a better future for the next
generation were the campaign's guiding principles.
Though the
general election campaign has only begun in earnest — and the policy
proposals floated by Romney on Sunday evening were far from formal
platform items — the former governor's remarks marked the campaign's
acute sense of what awaits them in the coming months.
That sense
was represented in Ann and Mitt Romney's discussion of how they might
win back women. The former governor also addressed how he might make
strides toward winning back Hispanic voters, another crucial voting bloc
with whom he and other Republicans lag, according to recent polls.
Predicting that immigration would become a much larger issue in the
fall campaign, Romney told his audience, "We have to get Hispanic voters
to vote for our party," warning that recent polling showing Hispanics
breaking in huge percentages for President Obama "spells doom for us."
Romney
said the GOP must offer its own policies to woo Hispanics, including a
"Republican DREAM Act," referring to the legislative proposal favored by
Democrats that would offer illegal immigrants a limited path to
citizenship, to give Hispanic voters a real choice between parties.
Romney
nonetheless predicted that, by November, the economy would trump
immigration as a driving issue for Hispanic voters, and he vowed also to
remind the Hispanic community that, despite promises of comprehensive
immigration reform by Obama, Democrats ultimately fell short in passing
legislation in their two years in control of Congress and the White
House at the start of the president's term.
Romney also described
his media strategy going forward, including his views on so-called
"earned media," and how the campaign might pair surrogates with
complimentary news outlets.
He said his campaign had been
well-covered by Fox News, but that Fox was watched by "the true
believers," and that he knew he would have to reach out to a broader
audience in order to win over independents and women voters that will
decide the election in November. He painted a picture of a media
landscape in which liberal voices won out on television, but
conservatives were strongest online.
"We are behind when it comes
to commentators on TV. They tend to be liberal," Romney said. "Where we
are ahead or even is on twitter and on the Internet."
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