
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks at the NAACP convention in Houston July 11, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Richard Carson
By Sam Youngman
IRWIN, Penn. | Tue Jul 17, 2012 2:32pm EDT
IRWIN, Penn. (Reuters) - Republican Mitt Romney shrugged off growing pressure on Tuesday to release more of his tax returns, and his campaign lashed out at President Barack Obama in an effort to turn the campaign debate away from Romney's business and financial record.
Romney said he would not give in to mounting attacks over his refusal to release his tax returns prior to 2010, including calls from some Republican allies to disclose the records and end the controversy.
"In the political environment that exists today, the opposition research of the Obama campaign is looking for anything they can use to distract from the failure of the president to reignite our economy," Romney said in an interview with the conservative National Review Online.
"I'm simply not enthusiastic about giving them hundreds or thousands of more pages to pick through, distort and lie about," he said.
The Obama campaign put up a new television ad in swing state Pennsylvania raising questions about why former executive Romney will not release the tax returns. The release of candidates' tax returns is voluntary but traditional.
"Tax havens, offshore accounts, carried interest -- Mitt Romney has used every trick in the book," the ad's narrator said. "Romney admits that over the last two years he's paid less than 15 percent in taxes on $43 million in income. Makes you wonder if some years he paid any taxes at all," the ad said, concluding: "What is Mitt Romney hiding?"
On a conference call with reporters arranged by the Romney campaign, former New Hampshire Governor John Sununu called Obama and his campaign a "bunch of liars" and said: "I wish the president would learn how to be an American."
Obama, who has released a certificate showing he was born in Hawaii, still faces accusations from some conservatives that he was not born in the United States and should not be legally able to serve as president.
Romney has tried to avoid the so-called "birther" issue, and Sununu was quick to retreat from his statement. "What I thought I said but what I didn't say is the president has to learn the American formula for creating business," Sununu said.
'OFF THE DEEP END'
Sununu's comments showed Romney was desperate to change the conversation and his campaign had gone "off the deep end," Obama campaign spokeswoman Lis Smith said.
"The question is what else they'll pull to avoid answering serious questions about Romney's tenure at Bain Capital and investments in foreign tax havens and offshore accounts," she said.
The sharpening attacks highlighted the increasingly brutal tone of the presidential campaign. At a stop in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, Romney attacked Obama's economic leadership for failing to make a dent in the nation's 8.2 percent unemployment rate.
Obama has painted Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, as too wealthy and out of touch to understand the economic difficulties of most Americans. His campaign has criticized Romney's leadership at Bain, questioning whether the company helped ship jobs overseas and if Romney kept an active role at the firm after saying he left in 1999.
Some polls have shown that drum beat of attacks are taking a toll on Romney, although he and Obama are still running close in most national opinion polls ahead of the November 6 presidential election.
Some prominent Republicans like former Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, Alabama Governor Robert Bentley and conservative commentators George Will and Bill Kristol have called on him in recent days to release the returns.
Republican congressman Ron Paul, a rival of Romney's in the presidential nominating fight, joined the chorus on Tuesday, telling Politico the move would help Romney politically.
The Obama campaign highlighted the growing Republican support for releasing the returns.
"This is a call that's not just being made by us, it's being made by many people, including people from Mitt Romney's own party," campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters.
The Romney campaign also offered more signals on Tuesday that it might be nearing a choice on a running mate by naming two key members of the team that will support the eventual No. 2. It said veteran political operative Randy Bumps would be director of operations and Kevin Sheridan, a former party spokesman, would be communications director.
Romney adviser Eric Fehrnstrom said on Monday a decision on a running mate had not been made, although speculation grew that he had narrowed his choice to a list of three -- Ohio Senator Rob Portman, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal and former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty.
The Republican nominating convention opens in Tampa, Florida, on August 27, in less than six weeks.
(Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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