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ArtikelThe Ryan Roadshow; The Republican Ticket  
Oleh: [s.n]
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: The Economist (http://search.proquest.com/) vol. 404 no. 8798 (Aug. 2012), page 29-30.
Topik: Presidential Elections; Political Parties; Economic Policy
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Isi artikelUnusually, America is a country founded on an idea, Paul Ryan told crowds at the Iowa State Fair on August 13th, his first solo appearance as vice-presidential running mate to Mitt Romney. Battling hecklers, the young congressman explained further. Because Americans believe their rights come from nature and God, not government, he said, they want a free society that rewards hard work, not a European-style welfare state. As it happens, Mr Ryan is an unusual vice-presidential candidate because he, too, embodies an idea. Though he holds reliably conservative views on issues from abortion to environmental regulation, his rise to national prominence at the age of just 42 rests on his mastery of one argument: that America faces a debt crisis, caused by a government that taxes and spends too much. Mr Ryan is best known as the author of alternative, radically-smaller, draft federal budgets embraced with fervour by many of his fellow Republicans in the House of Representatives. Voters are exceptionally worried about government spending. Those worries explain Mr Ryan's rocket-like rise to the national stage, as well as Mr Obama's careful nods to fiscal discipline. But if the thrifty swing state of Iowa is anything to go by, those same voters like the idea of other people footing the bill, long before they tighten their own belts. In that, perhaps, this election is not so unusual at all.
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