Mitt Romney's concern for his unpaid campaign props? Not really that sincere.

Mitt Romney's concern for his unpaid campaign props? Not really that sincere.

The United Mine Workers of America is sitting out this presidential race as Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama battle over parts of coal country. But former UMWA president and current AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka spoke to the press Monday not just as an advocate for all workers but from the perspective of a third-generation coal miner.

While Romney has centered his coal country campaign on inaccurate claims that overregulation by the Obama administration has weakened the coal industry (Romney's beloved free market is the real culprit), Trumka pointed to how workplace safety is enforced in this dangerous industry:



[President Obama] has appointed people who are enforcing safety laws, these are the real regulations coal operators don’t want enforced….MSHA [Mine Safety and Health Administration] is enforcing the laws and now coal operators are not able to get away with violations like they did before, especially high violators.

Mitt Romney says coal country is his country. Well, he's wrong—it's ours....Mitt Romney doesn't know about getting his hands dirty, and he sure doesn't know anything about coal mining.

Among the regulations and oversight that Romney would weaken or abolish are those that save miners' lives. So it's important that Romney's "Obama's war on coal" rhetoric not be allowed to cloud the picture, obscuring that coal's recent struggles aren't due to regulation, and that when he talks about regulations, he's talking about people's lives. Beyond that, Trumka drove home the distance between the coal miners Romney pretends to care about and Romney's own life: