Posted on 03/09/2006 2:21:25 PM PST by NutCrackerBoy
The field of candidates vying to succeed Gov. Mitt Romney in Massachusetts grew by one last week. For beleaguered Bay State Republicans, that may be one too many. Convenience-store magnate Christy Mihos bolted the party to run as an independent, increasing the Democrats chances of retaking the governorship. The reaction from a local blogger to Mihoss announcement: Welcome back, Dukakis.
Mihos isnt polished, has never before held elective office, and is the kind of candidate who gives his advisers fits. Five members of his campaign team quit just days before he officially jumped into the race. But Mihos does have the money to finance his campaign himself, and his fiscal conservatism could win over tax-averse independents who have voted Republican in the last four gubernatorial elections. Thats a bloc this years GOP candidate, Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey, needs to win handily in order to have a shot in November.
Since Romney isnt running for reelection, he might be tempted to ignore the race and head for greener pastures (say, Iowa). But that would be a political mistake. A Democratic pickup in Massachusetts would hurt Romneys 2008 chances. Healey is his number-two and chosen successor. Her defeat would be interpreted as a repudiation of the Romney administration. Also, as a self-described red speck in a blue state, Governor Romney has been sold as a Republican with bipartisan appeal and the ability to build the party in unlikely areas. To validate these selling points, Romney needs to show greater staying power than a single election win. Surely his national reputation as a party-builder wont endure if the Massachusetts GOP disintegrates on his watch.
This means that Romney must work to keep Massachusetts from reverting to a one-party state in 2006. The Democratic gubernatorial candidates have been making this task easier. Attorney General Tom Reilly, for example, was once the heavy favorite to win both the Democrats nomination and the governorship. His fortunes have recently plummeted due to a surprisingly inept campaign.
Reillys first running mate abruptly withdrew amidst controversy surrounding unpaid taxes and student loans. He lost Februarys Democratic caucuses to challenger Deval Patrick by a 2-to-1 margin. Patrick, a former head of the Clinton Justice Departments civil-rights division, has no electoral base, relatively low name recognition, and is the more liberal candidate --- all factors that make him more vulnerable in the general election. A Suffolk University poll showed Reillys 40-point primary lead of last year shrinking to just nine points.
According to the same poll, taken before Mihoss independent candidacy, either Democrat would still beat Healey. Yet Reilly would get below 50 percent of the vote, and Patrick bests her by just 39 percent to 32 percent. The Democrats arent invincible, but it will be hard for Healey to win if her own party is divided.
Last week, Romney joined former GOP Govs. William Weld, Paul Cellucci, and Jane Swift for a Healey fundraiser. The point was to marginalize Mihos and emphasize that Massachusetts had done well with Republican governors. The stake has been driven through the heart of the label Taxachusetts, Cellucci told the Boston Globe. As long as a Republican is in the corner office, that stake stays firmly in place.
It remains to be seen how much Romney can help. He has had little success building up the Massachusetts GOP, though it hasnt been for lack of trying. In 2004, he recruited a slate of 131 Republican legislative candidates, many of them running in districts where Democrats usually win in a walk. Dubbing them Romneys Reform Team, the governor raised a record $3 million for their campaign coffers and gave stump speeches on their behalf.
Come Election Day, however, none of Romneys candidates won. Republicans actually lost a house seat. Romney leaves behind a pitiful bench of GOP elected officials, including only 21 out of 160 state representatives and 6 out of 40 state senators. If Healey ends up tapping Sen. Scott Brown as her running mate, the latter number could be even smaller after the 2006 elections.
On some issues, Romney and Healey dont want to be closely linked. Healey distances herself from her bosss pro-life statements, telling voters shes extremely pro-choice. She favors civil unions but not gay marriage, while Romney opposes both. Yet the two can work together to protect Healeys right flank from Mihos, himself a pro-choice supporter of same-sex nuptials who wont be siphoning many socially conservative votes.
So far Massachusetts Republican setbacks havent affected Romneys national standing or diminished his supporters enthusiasm. But if the Bay State GOP looses its 16-year hold on the governorship and degenerates into squabbling factions, the case for a Romney presidential candidacy --- after only a single term as governor --- will be much weaker.
Romney should treat the commonwealths 2006 gubernatorial race as his first major test for 2008. Otherwise, would the last Republican elected official in Massachusetts please remember to turn out the lights when he leaves?
--- W. James Antle III is a senior writer for The American Conservative.
It's "common knowledge that Romney is running for President in '08...at least in most circles. What's with all of this coy "Kiss Me Come Catch Me" old -fashioned politico talk? about his motivation and his options.
Maybe that stuff works with Mass lunkheads...your track record indicates the state is rife with knuckle heads.
He's right out of central casting and has the job in a lock if looks alone are what it takes. BUT!!!! (big but....he's got monumental negatives that appear insurmountable. Being an "Empty Suit" doesn't help.
I don't know what you mean about "coy." Romney's "options" are only questioned with respect to the outcome of the Massachusetts gubernatorial election.
He's got monumental negatives that appear insurmountable. Being an "Empty Suit" doesn't help.
Empty Suit? I'm not necessarily jumping on the Romney bandwagon, but I definitely see genuine leadership and capability in the man.
You should learn to better use the language. Name calling won't get you very far.
What State are you from anyway? Must be a lunkhead and knuckle head free zone?
Romney is a decent man. Maybe he isn't as conservative as you'd like but he is a decent man, a good thinker and I bet he runs a good campaign.
The sad fact is, all 4 MA gubernatorial candidates are social leftists. Isn't there ANY social Conservative left in MA that can run for Governor ?
"Isn't there ANY social Conservative left in MA that can run for Governor ?"
I don't know what happened to Steve Pierce (the former GOP Minority Leader who ran against Weld). I know he worked for the Weld Administration for a time and then just dropped off the radar. I know at one time that Andy Card coveted the Governorship, but isn't he a social liberal ? I just have to say it isn't particularly enticing for any regular Republican to want to run and serve as Governor. Up until recently, I was under the mistaken impression that Christy Mihos was a Conservative, until I saw his positions on the issues, which were as odious as any hard-left 'Rat. It's just a sad embarrassment all the way around.
Yes, that was it, Steve Pierce. He served in the Weld Administration and (I believe) quit in 1991 when he ran in the special election to replace the deceased liberal Republican Congressman Silvio Conti in the 1st CD (western Mass.). That special election was probably Weld's sole attempt at trying to get a socially conservative Republican elected; Weld scheduled the vote for June, when summer vacation had already begun at the Five Colleges around Northampton, and Democrat John Olver beat Pierce by only 50%-48%. Pierce didn't try for the seat again in 1992 or 1994 (he would have had a good chance in the latter year), and I have no clue what he's been up to for the past 15 years or so.
No, it was Pierce (see posts 7 and 9).
To which Malone do you refer? Not Sam Malone, I hope; he was no Curt Schilling, either on the mound or in his politics). : )
No, I think he was the treasury secretary in Mass. for a while.
Ran in a few statewide Republican primaries, if memory serves.
I think Joe Malone dropped off the radar screen just about as quickly as Pierce.
Americans will never vote for a pro-abortion, pro-gay, anti-gun Massachusetts liberal, be he Ted Kennedy, John Kerry or Mitt Romney.
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