How dare you question my contradictory statements! Hey Rmoney, come clean and stop acting like a whiny little bitch.
Transcript from This Week:
STEPHANOPOULOS: Do you really believe, as Stephanie Cutter suggested just the other day, that Mitt Romney might have committed a felony when he signed those SEC reports?
EMANUEL: I think there’s — well, first of all, Stephanie cited the law, and it’s very clear. Either the filing with the SEC is accurate and his personal financial disclosure is not honest, or that’s honest and the SEC isn’t, but both can’t be accurate. Both cannot be accurate depicting a time where he said he was doing one thing or another. It’s just not possible.
STEPHANOPOULOS: He says it was just a formality…
(CROSSTALK)
STEPHANOPOULOS: … and he was untangling his — during the time he was untangling his involvement with Bain.
EMANUEL: He has — George, he has made Bain Capital his calling card for the presidency. And when you look at it, it doesn’t measure up to what he claims. And, number two, on both of those filings, one is accurate and one isn’t, and they both have consequences when one is not accurate. And that is what she stated.
And the second thing is, give it up about Stephanie. Don’t worry about that. What are you going to do when the Chinese leader says something to you or Putin says something to you? Going to whine it away (ph)? You cannot do that.
And as Mitt Romney said once to his own Republican colleagues, stop whining. I give him his own advice. Stop whining. Defend — if you want to claim Bain Capital as your calling card to the White House, then defend what happened to Bain Capital and what happened to those jobs that went overseas, those jobs that were actually cut and eliminated, the companies that went into bankruptcy.
And the very companies at Bain that went into bankruptcy while Bain was still getting paid, same philosophy that led to him advocating that the auto industry go bankrupt. The president of the United States said, no, we’re going to defend Chrysler, we’re going to defend G.M., and today America’s auto industry is thriving, not in bankruptcy, as Mitt Romney had recommended.