Screenshot of U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry at Monday's debate.
Screenshot of U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry at Monday's debate.

Perry jeered at tea party debate as Bachmann and Romney attack

By Jon Collins
Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 6:00 am

Tea party members in Monday’s debate audience veered between euphoric approval and brutal disdain of the Republican presidential candidates battling for their support onstage. Rivals, including U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, found openings in the armor of front-runner and tea party favorite Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who drew jeers from the crowd on issues ranging from immigration to mandated inoculation.

Social Security was one of the first issues broached in the debate, which was sponsored by CNN and Tea Party Express. All candidates agreed that the system needed to be reformed, while Perry backpedaled from his statements in the last debate where he characterized Social Security as a Ponzi scheme. Mitt Romney pounced on Perry’s rhetoric, calling it “over-the-top, unnecessary and frightening to people,” a critique that mostly fell flat with tea partiers.

Bachmann said the United States has to return to a concept of personal responsibility in regards to programs like Social Security.

“We’re the ‘everybody else’ that’s paying the freight for all of these things, that’s the principle that has to change,” Bachmann said. “We have to be an ownership society.”

Bachmann found space in the debate when she criticized Perry for a Texas program that inoculated teen girls against HPV, a virus that’s connected to a higher incidence of cervical cancer. Perry said the program grew out of his pro-life beliefs. Bachmann said “there was a big drug company that made millions of dollars because of this mandate,” and criticized Perry’s former chief of staff, who had lobbied for the drug company.

“The company was Merck, and it was $5,000 I had received from them,” Perry said in response. “I raised about $30 million. If you’re saying I can be bought for $5,000, I’m offended.”

Bachmann shot back: “I’m offended for all the little girls and their parents that didn’t have a choice.”

Perry also took heat from a handful of candidates for a Texas program that allows the children of undocumented immigrants to pay in-state tuition at state colleges, and for stating that a border fence across Texas wasn’t practical.

“Of course we build a fence, and of course we do not give in-state tuition credits to people who’ve come here illegally,” said Romney, garnering one of his few cheers of the night from tea partiers.

Perry said the legislation was an attempt to send a message to young people that they’re a productive member of society regardless of the “sound of their last name.”

“The American way is not to give taxpayer subsidized benefits to people who’ve broken our laws,” according to Bachmann, who said immigrants need to “speak the English language, learn American history and the Constitution.”

The eight candidates agreed on many of the other issues, including lowering taxes, repealing the Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act and shrinking government.

All candidates also agreed on auditing the Federal Reserve, although Perry said Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke should be tried for treason, a statement that other candidates backed away from despite rapturous applause from tea partiers.

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Comments

7 Comments

Rick Perry, bloodied but unbowed in GOP debate – The Guardian | Allergy Forecast
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Monsieur Grumpe
Comment posted September 13, 2011 @ 8:47 am

I watched the last half of the debate. For the sake of this country I hope that the audience was not representative of the majority. When people cheer the idea of letting the uninsured die because they can’t pay for medical treatment we have lost our humanity.


Kevin
Comment posted September 13, 2011 @ 8:58 am

Maybe we’ll get lucky and the whole lot of ‘em will take out their guns and start shooting each other. The resulting silence would be loverly.


TSG
Comment posted September 13, 2011 @ 9:55 am

The Tea Party and GOP to a large extent represent to me a basic selfishness that I find rather frightening. They are the sort of people that if stranded somewhere, would sacrifice you so they had more food with the logic that ‘well you’re hurt and going to die soon anyway, might as well kill you now while there is more meat on you’.


whaa
Comment posted September 13, 2011 @ 10:30 am

With Walmart being the largest employer in the country,and most of the people working their living hand to mouth, how are they going to save enough money for their retirment? Good luck to them if the GOP takes the Whitehouse and Congress.


Eric
Comment posted September 13, 2011 @ 10:36 am

The teabaggers represent the worst of America: profound ignorance, anti-thought and anti-science, bigoted, and indeed selfish.


Minndonn
Comment posted September 19, 2011 @ 5:03 pm

Eric don’t forget Christians only in talk, not in action.


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