Perhaps now, but you did imply as much. ;-)
OK, please show us some quotes where Romney has said that the rich are over taxed. I'd like to see what the exact context of his words were.
Colton, come on. Coming out and saying plainly, "The tax rate for rich people is just too high" isn't something that any candidate is going to say. That's why they're politicians. They know how to "speak" while we ignore their true intentions/actions. He'll hide it by bringing up "small businesses" and "lowering the tax rate for everyone."
Try his own website.
https://www.mittromney.com/issues/tax
Corporations, for their part, are subject to rules and regulations that all too often encourage tax gamesmanship while discouraging reinvestment in the American economy...
To repair the nation’s tax code, marginal rates must be brought down to stimulate entrepreneurship, job creation, and investment, while still raising the revenue needed to fund a smaller, smarter, simpler government.
America’s individual tax code applies relatively high marginal tax rates on a narrow tax base.
Try previous quotes:
https://factcheck.org/2012/08/romneys-impossible-tax-promise/
my view is the right way to do that is to limit them [tax preferences] for high-income individuals because I want to keep the progressivity of the code. One– one of the absolute requirements of any tax reform that I have in mind is that people who are at the high end, whether you call them the 1 percent or 2 percent or half a percent, that people at the high end will still pay the same share of the tax burden they’re paying now. I’m not looking for a tax cut for the very wealthiest. I’m looking to bring tax rates down for everyone, and, also, to make sure that we stimulate growth by doing so and jobs.
Unfortunately, Mitt's plan was found:
https://factcheck.org/2012/08/romneys-impossible-tax-promise/
Our major conclusion is that a revenue-neutral individual income tax change that incorporates the features Governor Romney has proposed – including reducing marginal tax rates substantially, eliminating the individual alternative minimum tax (AMT) and maintaining all tax breaks for saving and investment – would provide large tax cuts to high-income households, and increase the tax burdens on middle- and/or lower-income taxpayers.
And, as the NY Times found about Mitt's plan:
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/02/...e-plan-would-tax-lower-income-households.html
As a result, middle- and lower-income households — the 95 percent of the population earning less than about $200,000 annually — would have to make up the difference, according to the review by the center, which is affiliated with the Brookings Institution.
“It is not possible to design a revenue-neutral plan that does not reduce average tax burdens and the share of taxes paid by high-income taxpayers under the conditions described above, even when we try to make the plan as progressive as possible,” write the study’s authors, Samuel Brown, William Gale and Adam Looney.
I think Americans should be concerned, just as any Washington Post, Factchecker, NY Times, Huffington Post, article about Mitt's plan has stated, Mitt's plan just doesn't work the way he says. It's a tax cut that mostly benefits the wealthy (like himself) while piling onto the rest of us.
The right wing mantra is that the "job creators" aka rich are overtaxed. They need to have tax cuts to stimulate growth. This ideology has been endorsed by Romney as well, in his speeches, attacks against Obama, and tax plan. Sure, I didn't necessarily find ONE DIRECT QUOTE. But it's pretty plain to see what he means when he says,
The president’s announcement that he plans on extending (the tax cuts), just for certain classes of Americans — what he’s really saying is that those that are job-creators and small businesses are going to see a massive tax increase,” Romney said, “and that will kill jobs.”
“The president’s plan is aimed at small business and job creators. It will kill jobs in this country and hurt the middle class,” Romney said.”The right answer is to extend the tax rates as they current exist indefinitely, until we put in place an entirely new and reformed system.”
The “entirely new and reformed system” Romney envisions is little more than the Bush tax cuts on steroids: a 20 percent, across-the-board tax cut that is a massive giveaway to the richest Americans.
https://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/07/10/513561/romney-bush-tax-cuts-indefinitely/?mobile=nc
in other words:
We can't raise taxes now.
We need a new system in place.
The system that Mitt wants to install (mostly) benefits people like himself.
Again, connect the dots. It's not hard to see what Romney desires.
Hence, again, why he should release his tax returns. Explain how a new system, like the one he's suggesting, would be an upgrade over the current one. Show how "overtaxed" he was. Show how if he were taxed less how it would benefit the rest of us.
Finally, don't act like this hasn't been one of the main themes from Romney's party over the past few years. Watch from 4 min to 4:20.
[video]https://video.foxbusiness.com/v/1400006978001/simone-rich-are-overtaxed/
He claims that the rich are overtaxed and that our government has a spending problem not a revenue problem.
Which, if you were to google that quote, you'd find hundreds of websites, blogs, and articles quoting that.
One person who has stated it? Romney:
https://www.usatoday.com/news/opini...-07/romney-balance-budget-no-taxes/53003298/1
"the government does not have a revenue problem; it has a spending problem."