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Romney Thinks HP CEO Would Have Been A Great Governor, Even Though Her Company Is Bleeding 27,000 Jobs

Hewlett Packard has announced that they will be laying off 27,000 people — eight percent of their staff– after losses of over a billion dollars in the last year.

Mitt Romney, though, thinks that HP’s CEO would make a great governor.

Just last week, Romney stated that if HP CEO Meg Whitman had won her bid for governor, the state of California would be in a much better financial situation:

I wish Californians had elected Meg Whitman. She would have been more successful and explained to Californians the need to cut back on spending and eliminate unnecessary programs. There are other states that have very different records. I think it’s interesting that the state with the highest or among the highest tax rates in the nation also has the worst or near the worst deficit.

California does have a devastatingly high unemployment rate — 10.9 percent — but if all of the HP workers who are getting laid off lived in the state, its unemployment rate would be pushed over the 11 percent line.

Meanwhile, the spending cuts Whitman and Romney advocate wouldn’t actually help the state economy. As Center for American Progress economist Adam Hersh noted in 2011, the states that have cut the most spending have shed the most jobs.

NEWS FLASH

0: Number Of Times Romney Mentioned Immigration At Latino Event | Mitt Romney didn’t mention immigration during his speech to the Latino Coalition Economic Summit on Wednesday. Romney spoke primarily about education and indirectly referenced undocumented students, saying, “No matter what circumstances they were born into, every child has a dream about where they can go or what they can become.” For many Latinos, these are one in the same: 91 percent of Latinos support the DREAM Act, and many consider immigration issues a top priority.

NEWS FLASH

Romney’s Oil Adviser Contributes $1 Million To Pro-Romney Super PAC | One month after oil shale billionaire Harold Hamm became Mitt Romney’s oil energy adviser, he contributed nearly $1 million to the pro-Romney super PAC Restore Our Future, for the second-largest contribution it received last month. Hamm has already has already maxed out his $2,500 contributions to Romney’s campaign, and contributed another $61,600 to the Republican National Committee. Campaigns and super PACs are not legally allowed to coordinate, but in reality many of Romney’s donors have turned to super PACs to escape contribution ceilings. Hamm’s donations, accounting for one-fifth of the super PAC’s April fundraising, only further blurs the line between his dual role advising energy policy and financing Romney’s super PAC machine.

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