And yet Obama or his team said nothing when his supporters shouted Romney is a “traitor” during last weekend’s Ohio speech.

(The Hill) — President Obama’s campaign is looking to seize on a pair of controversial comments by supporters at Mitt Romney’s town hall meeting in Cleveland Monday, calling on the presumptive Republican nominee to “stand up to the extreme voices in his party.”
“Today we saw Mitt Romney’s version of leadership: standing by silently as his chief surrogate attacked the President’s family at the event and another supporter alleged that the President should be tried for treason,” said Obama spokeswoman Lis Smith in a statement. “Time after time in this campaign, Mitt Romney has had the opportunity to show that he has the fortitude to stand up to hateful and over-the-line rhetoric and time after time, he has failed to do so. If this is the ‘leadership’ he has shown on the campaign trail, what can the American people expect of him as commander-in-chief?”
The statement was prompted by remarks by Ohio state auditor Dave Yost, one of the local politicians warming up the crowd for Romney before his event Monday. Yost said Obama claiming credit for the Bin Laden raid was like “giving Ronald McDonald credit for the Big Mac you ate for lunch.” Yost continued on to say “the guy at the griddle deserved credit.”
