By Michelle Malkin
Chutzpah overload in full effect: President Obama’s sleazy super-PAC,
run by his former White House spokesman Bill Burton, just released an
ad accusing GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney of causing the cancer
death of a steelworker’s wife.
It’s not just a slanderous and false
attack. It’s a foolish attempt to camouflage the administration’s
massive jobs death toll, politicized pension plundering and Big Labor
bailout cronyism. And it will backfire big time because the thousands
and thousands of true victims of Obama’s economic wreckage are speaking
up and fighting back.
Let’s dispense with the “Romney = murderer” meme first. The warped
Priorities USA ad features the claims of one Joe Soptic, a former
employee at the Kansas City-based GST Steel plant. The plant went
bankrupt years after Bain Capital acquired it. Soptic blames Romney for
the loss of his job and health insurance — and for the subsequent death
of his wife a “short time after” the plant’s closure.
But Romney stopped working for Bain in 1999. The plant closed in
2001. And Soptic’s wife died in 2006. Oh, and Soptic admitted to CNN on
Tuesday afternoon that the family in fact had health insurance at the time of Soptic’s wife’s death. But it’s still all-powerful, time-traveling, omnipresent Darth Romney’s fault.
Obama flack turned super-PAC slime-master Burton shrugged off the
facts and doubled down on the campaign’s class-warfare bloviation.
“Families and individuals had to find new jobs, new sources of health
insurance and a way to make up for the pensions they lost,” he told Politico.
“Mitt Romney has had an enduring impact on the lives of thousands of
men and women, and for many of them, that impact has been devastating.”
Yet, the Soptic story is the best they could scrape together? Stamp this one “EPIC FAIL.”
While Team Obama promotes fables to indict Romney, the
incontrovertible stories of the current administration’s economic
malpractice are finally getting out. In 2010, I first reported on how Obama’s UAW bailout threw tens of thousands of nonunion autoworkers under the bus. It’s the ongoing horror story of some 20,000 white-collar workers at Delphi, a leading auto parts company spun off from GM a decade ago.
As Washington rushed to nationalize the U.S. auto industry with $80
billion in taxpayer “rescue” funds and avoid contested court termination
proceedings, the White House auto team and the Treasury Department
schemed with Big Labor bosses to preserve UAW members’ costly pension
funds by shafting their nonunion counterparts.
In addition, the nonunion pensioners lost all of their health and
life insurance benefits. The abused workers — most from hard-hit
northeast Ohio, Michigan and neighboring states — had devoted decades of
their lives as secretaries, technicians, engineers and sales employees
at Delphi/GM. Some workers have watched up to 70 percent of their
pensions vanish.
“I worked for 34 years at GM/Delphi Corp. When Delphi went bankrupt,
we lost everything,” Dana Strickland of Michigan wrote me. “Because I
was salaried (middle management), we lost our pension and health
insurance. I did not belong to the union, so GM/Delphi could have cared
less. I have never felt so betrayed. We never hear this brought to the
public’s attention. People need to know how we were screwed, while the
Obama administration kissed up to the union.”
“I’m one of the Delphi Salaried Retirees that lost the health care,
life insurance and 67 percent of the pension I was promised in
retirement after working hard for 40 years,” Charles Stone of Michigan
e-mailed. “Words cannot describe the frustration and let down these
events have thrust on my family’s lives, and to have GM’s rescue all
sugar-coated in the current political environment is like putting
lipstick on a pig. … We will continue to fight to right this grievous
wrong.”
Tom Rose of Ohio added: “I am one of the 20,000 salaried retirees
that lost all of my health care and — in my case — a 40 percent pension
cut. So I am now paying increased health care costs with fewer pension
dollars and contributing what is left to our lawsuit to correct this
injustice. Meanwhile, the politically connected union has their full
pension and 90-plus percent of their health care. You have hit upon the
key question: How can our own federal government pick winners and losers
amongst its own citizens?”
Through two costly years of litigation and investigation, the Delphi
workers have exposed how the stacked White House Auto Task Force schemed
with union bosses to “cherry pick” (one Obama official’s own words)
which financial obligations the new Government Motors company would
assume and which they would abandon based on their political expedience.
Obama’s own former auto czar Steve Rattner admitted in his recent
memoir that “attacking the union’s sacred cow” could “jeopardize” the
auto bailout deal.
In June, 20 months after a federal judge first ordered the government to cooperate, the Delphi Salaried Retirees Association broke through the administration’s information stonewall and dislodged 62,000 pages of documents in their lawsuit to right the administration’s wrongs. As Matthew Boyle of The Daily Caller
reported on Tuesday, the documents included “internal government emails
(that contradicted) sworn testimony, in federal court and before
Congress, given by several Obama administration figures. They also
indicate that the administration misled lawmakers and the courts … and
that administration figures violated federal law.”
Meanwhile, the Delphi workers who got shafted are getting in the faces of the administration and the public with a new web ad
produced by conservative advocacy group Let Freedom Ring. They are
asking, “Why, Mr. President? Why?” They — and America — deserve answers
and justice, not more Bizarro World smears and fantastical bedtime
stories.
Michelle Malkin