SPEAKERS: FORMER GOV. MITT ROMNEY, R-MASS.
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA
CANDY CROWLEY, MODERATOR
CROWLEY:
Good evening from Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. I'm Candy
Crowley from CNN's "State of the Union." We are here for the second
presidential debate, a town hall, sponsored by the Commission on
Presidential Debates.
CROWLEY: The Gallup organization chose 82
uncommitted voters from the New York area. Their questions will drive
the night. My goal is to give the conversation direction and to ensure
questions get answered.
The questions are known to me and my team only. Neither the commission, nor the candidates have seen them.
I
hope to get to as many questions as possible. And because I am the
optimistic sort, I'm sure the candidates will oblige by keeping their
answers concise
and on point.
Each candidate has as much
as two minutes to respond to a common question, and there will be a
two-minute follow-up. The audience here in the hall has agreed to be
polite and attentive -- no cheering or booing or outbursts of any sort.
We will set aside that agreement just this once to welcome President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney.
(APPLAUSE)
Gentlemen,
thank you both for joining us here tonight. We have a lot of folks
who've been waiting all day to talk to you, so I want to get right to
it.
Governor Romney, as you know, you won the coin toss,
so the first question will go to you. And I want to turn to a first-time
voter, Jeremy Epstein, who has a question for you.
QUESTION:
Mr. President, Governor Romney, as a 20-year-old college student, all I
hear from professors, neighbors and others is that when I graduate, I
will have little chance to get employment. What can you say to reassure
me, but more importantly my parents, that I will be able to sufficiently
support myself after I graduate?
ROMNEY: Thank you,
Jeremy. I appreciate your -- your question, and thank you for being here
this evening and to all of those from Nassau County that have come,
thank you for your time. Thank you to Hofstra University and to Candy
Crowley for organizing and leading this -- this event.
Thank you, Mr. President, also for being part of this -- this debate.
Your
question -- your question is one that's being asked by college kids all
over this country. I was in Pennsylvania with someone who had just
graduated -- this was in Philadelphia -- and she said, "I've got my
degree. I can't find a job. I've got three part- time jobs. They're just
barely enough to pay for my food and pay for an apartment. I can't
begin to pay back my student loans."
So what we have to
do is two things. We have to make sure that we make it easier for kids
to afford college And also make sure that when they get out of college,
there's a job. When I was governor of Massachusetts, to get a high
school degree, you had to pass an exam. If you graduated in the top
quarter of your airlines, we gave you a John and Abigail Adams
scholarship, four years tuition free in the college of your choice in
Massachusetts, it's a public institution.
I want to make
sure we keep our Pell grant program growing. We're also going to have
our loan program, so that people are able to afford school. But the key
thing is to make sure you can get a job when you get out of school. And
what's happened over the last four years has been very, very hard for
America's young people. I want you to be able to get a job.
I
know what it takes to get this economy going. With half of college kids
graduating this year without a college -- excuse me, without a job. And
without a college level job, that's just unacceptable.
And
likewise you've got more and more debt on your back. So more debt and
less jobs. I'm going to change that. I know what it takes to create good
jobs again. I know what it takes to make sure that you have the kind of
opportunity you deserve. And kids across this country are going to
recognize, we're bringing back an economy.
It's not going
to be like the last four years. The middle-class has been crushed over
the last four years, and jobs have been too scarce. I know what it takes
to bring them back, and I'm going to do that, and make sure that when
you graduate -- when do you graduate? Read morehttp://www.cbsnews.com/8301-250_162-57533829/transcript-second-2012-presidential-debate-part-1/
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