Ryan seen as Romney's bridge across GOP spectrum

Rep. Paul Ryan
Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan of Wisconsin speaks during a campaign rally in front of the USS Wisconsin on Aug. 11, 2012 in Norfolk, Va. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced Ryan, a seven-term U.S. representative, as his presidential running mate. Ryan is the chairman of the House Budget Committee and provides a strong contrast to the Obama administration on fiscal policy.
Getty Images/Justin Sullivan

By BRIAN BAKST and TODD RICHMOND, Associated Press

JANESVILLE, Wis. (AP) -- Even before Wisconsin sent Paul Ryan to Congress, he was meticulously carving a path that seemed to point only upward.

As a young Capitol Hill staffer, he impressed Republican lawmakers with his hustle and intellectual curiosity. He blended quickly with an elite crop of conservative thinkers. By his 30s, he was a congressman on his way to becoming a GOP name brand with his push-the-edge budget proposals.

Ryan's climb reached new heights Saturday when Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney announced him as his running mate.

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"Mitt's Choice for VP is Paul Ryan," said a phone app Romney's team created to spread the word to supporters.

As the chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan gives Romney a link to Capitol Hill leadership and underscores Romney's effort to make the election a referendum on the nation's economic course. Romney also could see his standing improve in Wisconsin, a state President Barack Obama won handily four years ago but that could be much tighter this November.

Even so, Ryan has been a double-edged sword for Romney. The congressman's endorsement of Romney came at a critical stage of the GOP primaries, giving him a boost in the Wisconsin race that effectively buried Romney's final threat. But it also meant Romney was embracing the Ryan-sponsored budget proposal that Democrats fiercely target as painful to the poor and elderly.

Still, the square-jawed congressman is viewed as a bridge between the buttoned-up GOP establishment and the riled-up tea party movement.

At 42, Ryan has spent almost half of his life in the Washington fold, the last 14 representing a southern Wisconsin district that runs from the shores of Lake Michigan through farm country south of Madison.

Ryan grew up in Janesville and still lives just down the block from where he spent his boyhood. His father, a lawyer, died of a heart attack when Ryan was a teenager. It's why Ryan is a fitness buff, leading fellow lawmakers through grueling, early morning workouts and pushing himself through mountain climbs.

That same intensity propelled him on the political front, too.

Rep. Paul Ryan
Newly announced Republican vice presidential candidate, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks during a campaign rally in front of the USS Wisconsin on Aug. 11, 2012 in Norfolk, Va. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced Ryan, a seven-term congressman, as his vice presidential running mate. Ryan is the chairman of the House Budget Committee and provides a strong contrast to the Obama administration on fiscal policy.
Getty Images/Justin Sullivan

He was first exposed to Congress as a summer intern to Sen. Robert Kasten. With an economics degree in hand, Ryan worked his way through committee staff assignments, a prominent think tank and top legislative advisory roles until opportunity arose with an open seat from his home turf. He leveraged Washington connections, local ties forged through the family construction business and the backing of anti-abortion groups en route to his surprisingly comfortable victory.

As a 28-year-old, Ryan entered Congress brimming with idealistic views about forcing government to become leaner and less intrusive, principles he thought even fellow Republicans were abandoning too readily.

"One of the first lessons I learned was, even if you come to Congress believing in limited government and fiscal prudence once you get here you are bombarded with pressure to violate your conscience and your commitment to help secure the people's natural right to equal opportunity," Ryan wrote in a 2010 book.

Critics question Ryan's own consistency. They note that he backed a costly prescription drug benefit during Republican George W. Bush's presidency that added strain to the Medicare budget, which Ryan touted at the time as "one of the most critical pieces of legislation" enacted since he joined Congress. He said in a June interview with The Associated Press that he took a "defensive" vote to ward off a more expensive Senate version. More recently, Ryan served on a bipartisan presidential debt commission but balked at its report because a tax increase was on the menu of options.

He is a disciple of and past aide to the late Rep. Jack Kemp, once a GOP vice presidential nominee himself who effusively promoted tax cuts as a central tenet for economic growth.

From the title page of his idyllic "Path to Prosperity" budget plan down to the most scrutinized fine print, Ryan is adept at framing proposals in the most pleasant terms.

Ryan's opponents charge that his call to open Medicare to more private competition is too risky even if implementation would be a ways off; he counters that the latest version was fashioned in consultation with prominent Democrats in hopes of heading off an all-out program collapse that would devastate the financial security of future retirees.

Rep. Paul Ryan and family
U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., is hugged by his children as his wife, Janna, looks on after GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced Ryan as his running mate in front of the USS Wisconsin on Aug. 11, 2012 in Norfolk, Va.
Getty Images/Win McNamee

Foes say his plans to scale back food stamps and housing assistance are mean-spirited; Ryan describes the moves, which would allow states to further customize their welfare programs while imposing tougher time limits and work requirements, as empowerment for the downtrodden who he argues are being lulled into lives of complacency and dependency.

It took time for Ryan's own party to get fully behind his ideas. A few years ago, when Ryan first proposed dramatic changes to entitlement programs like Medicare some in the GOP were skittish because Democrats pounced on the plans as undermining the health program accessed by millions of retirees.

Kasten said Ryan's refusal to back down paid off politically.

"If all the sudden you become the dartboard for everyone on the left and you are willing to stand there and take the heat and the darts, you develop a tremendous amount of respect even from those who are throwing the darts," Kasten said. "In the beginning it's a grudging respect. It grows into a true respect." Ryan has let opportunities to advance come and go, most recently when he opted not to seek an open U.S. Senate seat. His young family factored into his considerations; he and wife, tax attorney Janna, have a daughter and two sons.

Associated Press writers Steve Peoples and Kasie Hunt contributed to this report.

A look at Paul Ryan

By The Associated Press

NAME: Paul Davis Ryan, 42; born Jan. 29, 1970; Janesville, Wis.

EXPERIENCE: U.S. representative; 1999-present; marketing consultant, Ryan Inc. Central, 1997-1998; legislative director for U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., 1995-1997; adviser and speechwriter, Empower America, 1993-1995; aide to U.S. Sen. Bob Kasten, R-Wis., 1992.

EDUCATION: Bachelor's degree, Miami University of Ohio, 1992.

FAMILY: Wife, Janna; daughter Liza 10, sons Charles, 8, and Sam, 7.

QUOTE: "Here in Wisconsin, I picked who I think is going to be the next president of the United States -- I picked Mitt Romney. The moment is here. The country can be saved. It is not too late to get America back on the right track. ... It is not too late to save the American idea."

-- Ryan, speaking during an April 2012 campaign stop with Romney after endorsing him in the Republican primary.