The budget also promises to turn Medicare, the popular government-run health service, into a system of vouchers for private care.
To the Romney campaign, Ryan is a smart and affable family man with a penchant for thinking bold thoughts. But the Ryan budget was immediately being featured in Democrat materials emailed to the formidable list of supporters who signed on to Obama's 2008 campaign, and it topped the list of talking points handed out to party elders. All the efforts circled back to one word: "extreme".
Paul Ryan is "the mastermind behind the extreme GOP budget plan", a new Democratic campaign video says. "Governor Romney has embraced many of the positions that Congressman Ryan espouses, extreme as they sound," Axelrod said on CNN's State of the Nation.
Campaigners unaffiliated with the Democrats also weighed in, underscoring the risk that Romney could alienate crucial independent voters. The Ryan budget has long been a controversial document - even former Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich called it "right-wing social engineering" - and it also roused Catholic nuns into opposition. Network, a Catholic social justice lobby group, damned Ryan's proposals as immoral.
Sister Simone Campbell, Network's executive director, said: "His budget deliberately harms people at the economic margins. It is also unpatriotic because it says that we are an individualistic, selfish nation."
Romney's listless campaign for President appeared to have been faltering in the battleground states where the White House will be won or lost in less than three months' time, as Obama shifted the terms of the debate away from the economy. Instead, attention had turned to Romney's record in the private sector, as head of the private equity group Bain Capital, and his refusal to detail his tax history.
The addition of Ryan to the ticket gives the campaign the opportunity to cast Republican proposals for tax cuts for the rich as more than a giveaway to Romney's friends, but as part of a coherent long-term economic reform agenda.
Picking Ryan gives the Romney candidacy an intellectual definition that it had previously lacked. It has electrified the grassroots of the Republican Party and many of its elite thinkers, but it also risks saddling Romney with a budget plan that includes potentially unpopular elements that he has never fully endorsed.
Romney said on CBS' 60 Minutes he was running on his budget proposals, not the more controversial plan authored by his running-mate. During the Republican primary, Romney had called Ryan's budget a "bold and exciting effort" that was "very much needed".
- Independent, AP