Friday, July 27, 2012

Charlotte-area small business owners tell Obama - Charlotte Observer

DENVER Nicole Goolsby, 48, started her small business, the Cornelius, N.C.-based Rion Homes, 12 years ago after taking out a $15,000 loan on her credit card and setting up a desk in her bedroom.

She says she did not rely on the federal government for help ? reacting to recent comments by President Barack Obama that ?if you?ve got a business ? you didn?t build that; somebody else made that happen.?

?President Obama?s comments were an insult to the sweat and sacrifice that I have put into my business in an effort to build a better life for my children and my community,? Goolsby said Wednesday a ?We Did Build This? event sponsored the campaign for Obama?s GOP opponent, Mitt Romney.

?Believe me,? she said. ?The government has not built my business nor is government even helping my business.?

The Romney campaign held two ?We Did Build This? events Wednesday in North Carolina ? at the Denver Construction Company during the afternoon and an earlier gathering at Snoopy?s Hot Dogs in Raleigh. At the Denver event, four small business owners shared their experiences in building their companies and explained why they think Romney is a better candidate.

Ken Tucker, 47, owner of Denver Construction Co., said he had to borrow money against his home mortgage to make payroll. He said his tax dollars help pay for the roads that he and other small business owners use.

?We?re paying property taxes, fuel taxes,? Tucker said. ?How much more taxes do you want us to pay? I had forty-something employees, now I have twenty-three.?

There were two dozen events around the country Wednesday touting the ?We Did Build This? theme, according to Robert Reid, the North Carolina spokesman for Romney?s campaign. The tumult over Obama?s comments on small-business success shows no sign of fading, and the president is pushing back hard with new ads scheduled to run in North Carolina and other battleground states to counter Romney?s claims.

What the president said

In a Virginia rally earlier this month, Obama spoke about government?s supportive role in providing a stable environment in which businesses can thrive.

?Look,? the president said, ?if you?ve been successful, you didn?t get there on your own. ? Let me tell you something: There are a whole bunch of hard-working people out there. If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help.?

Since then, Obama says the ?you didn?t build that? phrase was taken out of context. But the Romney campaign maintains it shows the president is out of touch with the contributions of small businesses.

?Everyone has access to roads and bridges. What allowed these businesses to succeed is their risk taking, their sacrifices, their innovation,? said Reid, the state Romney campaign spokesman. ?They should be patted on the back ? not demonized for it.?

In an email to an Observer reporter, Jamie Crain, a spokeswoman for the North Carolina Democratic Party, called the ?We Did Build This? campaign events Wednesday a ?desperate attempt to change the topic from his failing record as Governor of Massachusetts, his ?business experience? outsourcing American jobs overseas and his continued refusal to be transparent with voters and release his tax returns. If Mitt Romney applied Romney Economics to the nation like he did in Massachusetts, it would hurt North Carolina?s small businesses and stifle their growth.?

Earlier this month, the Obama campaign held an event in Charlotte touting small businesses.

According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, North Carolina?s 786,759 small businesses represent 98 percent of all employers in the state. The Associated Press contributed to this article.

Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/07/26/3406243/entrepreneurs-rally-for-romney.html

jason wu jason wu the patriot nick diaz vs carlos condit hall of fame occupy dc ufc 143 fight card

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.