During the 2008 debates, Brett O’Donnell, who was Senator John McCain’s debate coach, also reportedly noted Obama’s tendency to look directly at his opponent when attacking.

On the issue of deportation reprieves, Romney told the Denver Post he would not take them away from people who received them before he took office and would not issue new ones. But that could mean that thousands of pending exemptions could be denied if they are not resolved before Jan. 20, when Romney would be inaugurated.

And approval of those cases is moving slowly; the Obama administration reported Tuesday that of 82,000 applications for exemptions, just 29 had been approved by Sept. 13.

I'll bet the immigrants are tired of the shit fooley, too. 

Romney Monday also offered slightly more details to his tax plan, laying out one scenario with a Denver television station. Romney has previously said he would lower tax rates while closing loopholes and deductions, but he has repeatedly refused to disclose any specifics on which loopholes.

‘‘As an option you could say everybody’s going to get up to a $17,000 deduction; and you could use your charitable deduction, your home mortgage deduction, or others — your health care deduction, and you can fill that bucket, if you will, that $17,000 bucket that way,” Romney told Fox affiliate KDVR. ‘‘And higher-income people might have a lower number.’’

I don't even make $17,000. 

At an event in Charlotte, N.C., Vice President Joe Biden criticized Republican tax proposals but, in a comment quickly seized on by Romney’s campaign, said the middle class had been “buried the last four years.” That includes most of Obama’s term.

Related: The Eastwood Excuse 

If Obama loses you can call it the Biden excuse. 

Romney’s campaign immediately seized upon the comment, saying they agreed that the middle class had been “buried.”