Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, takes a walk with his wife Ann, on the beach after a campaign stop at Holland State Park on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 in Holland, Mich. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, takes a walk with his wife Ann, on the beach after a campaign stop at Holland State Park on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 in Holland, Mich. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks during a campaign stop at Holland State Park on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 in Holland, Mich. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
China?s President Hu Jintao speaks as President Barack Obama listens during a bilateral meeting during the G20 Summit, Tuesday, June 19, 2012, in Los Cabos, Mexico. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
The shunned Simpson-Bowles deficit-reduction report is finally getting some love: from both the Obama and Romney camps.
Republican challenger Mitt Romney has been talking up the plan and criticizing President Barack Obama for ignoring it.
Romney told CBS' "Face the Nation" that he agrees with the concept of lowering tax rates and broadening the tax base advocated by the co-chairmen of Obama's deficit commission, Republican Alan Simpson and Democrat Erskine Bowles.
Romney earlier said he thought "very highly" of their recommendations, suggesting some similarity with a House GOP plan authored by Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis.
Romney campaigned with Ryan this week in Wisconsin and with House Speaker John Boehner in Ohio, both of whom opposed the Simpson-Bowles plan.
The Obama campaign responded with a memo noting that, while Obama didn't endorse the Simpson-Bowles findings "in their entirety," his 2013 budget and later economic proposals build on the commission's recommendations.
"Despite his praise for the Simpson-Bowles approach, Romney's plans are fundamentally incompatible with it," wrote James Kvaal, Obama campaign policy director. "Simpson-Bowles would reduce the deficits. The Romney plan would explode them."
There's a reason the Simpson-Bowles plan has been gathering dust on the shelf since December 2010.
It mixes painful cuts to safety-net programs with big tax increases even while cutting top rates on individuals and corporations to 28 percent from 35 percent.
It would hike the Social Security retirement age and scale back popular tax deductions for health insurance and mortgage interest ? toxic proposals for either party in an election year.
Romney, coming off a five-day road trip in which he tried to pull Rust Belt states from Obama's column, had two fundraisers Wednesday in Michigan. Obama had no scheduled public events after an early-morning return from a world leaders' summit in Mexico.
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Follow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tomraum. For more AP political coverage, look for the 2012 Presidential Race in AP Mobile's Big Stories section. Also follow https://twitter.com/APCampaign and AP journalists covering the campaign: https://twitter.com/AP/ap-campaign-2012
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