Money | Mitt Romney Under Romney, Bain Took Loads of Government Aid Bloomberg suggests his rhetoric doesn't match reality By Kevin Spak Posted Jun 7, 2012 2:34 PM CDT Copied In this March 3, 2012, file photo, Mitt Romney, speaks at a campaign rally in Dayton, Ohio. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File) When Mitt Romney says he favors a small government, does he mean the kind that built a Bain Capital-owned company in California a conveyor belt bridge between two of its buildings? Or the kind that helped buy new equipment for a Bain steel plant in Indiana—a plant he's featured in campaign ads? Those are just a few of the many examples Bloomberg says it's found of Bain taking government handouts, a tradition dating back to Romney's first decade as CEO. Much of the government help was from local governments that wanted to prevent the companies from moving; New York City, for instance, gave a Bain company tax breaks to prevent a New Jersey move. Asked about the disconnect between Romney's rhetoric and Bain's record, a Romney spokeswoman simply said that such incentives were "not at all uncommon." Read These Next Trump says attack killed Iran's supreme leader. We now know what might send bedbugs scurrying. Baby born deep in Amazon rainforest is 'a source of hope.' Woman, 64, is in hot water over her singing of a national anthem. Report an error