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Democrats: Paul Ryan ‘lied’ in convention speech

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TAMPA, Fla. – Democrats came out swinging Thursday with a fact-check rebuttal of Paul Ryan’s prime-time convention speech, saying he “lied,” and pre-butted Mitt Romney’s expected address.

“There’s no delicate way to say this: Paul Ryan lied,” said Stephanie Cutter, the deputy campaign manager for President Obama’s campaign from the party’s war room a few blocks from the convention hall.

Romney’s address to the Republican National Convention, she said, will be an “Etch-A-Sketch of epic proportions” as the Republican presidential nominee’s positions on various issues have shifted.

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Thursday’s lineup on the convention stage is the crescendo of the gathering here, as the former Massachusetts governor caps his hard-fought battle to win the nomination.

The stage was set for this moment by Ryan, the vice presidential pick, in a Wednesday night address that was widely seen as a high point in a sometimes sputtering convention truncated by Hurricane Isaac.

PHOTOS: Paul Ryan’s past

Ryan’s high-octane turn energized the crowd – presenting an image of a youthful and passionate policy wonk who wowed convention-goers with his optimistic “we can do this” approach to fixing the nation’s economic problems.

But several of Ryan’s key points hewed along the edges of factuality, and fact-checkers have been quick to pounce.

Claims that Obama is taking $716 billion from Medicarehave been rebutted as reductions to healthcare providers, rather than cuts to senior beneficiaries – and Ryan’s own proposed federal budget counts on similar Medicare savings to reduce the deficit.

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Ryan criticized Obama for not embracing the findings of the president’s bipartisan fiscal commission on deficit reduction, but the Wisconsin Republican congressman voted against the recommendations as a member of the commission.

The promise of 12 million new jobs Ryan pledged under a Romney-Ryan administration is about what the Labor Department has tallied for the last decade and projected for the next.

Yet even in their full-throttled critique of Ryan, Democrats acknowledged the political potency of the new GOP star.

“He played the role of the vice presidential attack dog,” said Cutter. “He did it well.”

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Lisa.Mascaro@latimes.com

Twitter: @LisaMascaroinDC

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