Posted on 12/16/2007 8:49:17 PM PST by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON - Republican Mitt Romney sought Sunday to deflect charges that he is a flip-flopper, insisting he had learned from experience and could be counted on to keep his campaign promises if elected president.
Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, also called on his top rival Mike Huckabee to apologize to President Bush. In an article in the journal Foreign Affairs, Huckabee criticized Bush's foreign policy as an "arrogant bunker mentality."
Huckabee said no apology is necessary and that Romney should read the article.
Appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press," a somewhat defensive Romney acknowledged that he has shifted positions on some issues and explained that he did so after learning from experience. He said it would be a mistake if a candidate "stubbornly takes a position on a particular act and says, 'Well, I'm never changing my view based on what I've learned.'"
"If you're looking for someone who's never changed any positions on any policies, then I'm not your guy," Romney said.
At the same time, Romney insisted that as governor he kept all of his campaign promises despite changing some views, and said he would stick to his promises if elected president.
"Bottom line: All the positions you laid out today as a presidential candidate, can you assure the voters you won't flip back to some of the positions you had when you were governor of Massachusetts?" asked NBC moderator Tim Russert.
"Of course," Romney responded.
Among the issues:
_Abortion. Romney acknowledged changing his views in 2004 from supporting abortion rights to opposing abortion. He said he did not entirely betray abortion-rights voters, either, because he did not seek to change Massachusetts abortion laws.
_Taxes. Romney said he promised not to raise taxes as governor and did not go back on his word by raising fees by about $240 million to help balance the budget. The fees were on services such as gun licenses and training to combat domestic violence. He explained that because the fees were not on broad-based services, such as driver's licenses, they did not "have a sense, a feeling like a tax." "I ran as an individual who would not raise taxes, and I didn't," he said.
_Same-sex rights. Romney acknowledged that he initially supported federal efforts to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation, but now only supports such laws at the state level. In an unsuccessful Senate run in 1994, Romney promised to be "more effective on gay rights in the Senate than Ted Kennedy."
_Guns. Romney said, like President Bush, he would have signed an extension of the federal assault weapons ban if Congress had acted on it before it expired in 2004. A Des Moines Register survey from October said: "Romney opposes reinstating the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004. He does not believe any more federal gun laws are needed but said he would consider signing carefully tailored legislation regulating weapons of 'unusual lethality or power.'"
Romney repeated the latter sentence on Sunday.
Romney also told Russert he had "the support of the NRA" and "received the endorsement of the NRA" as governor, but the gun-rights group did not endorse him during his 2002 gubernatorial campaign. Romney received a "Grade B" from the group, but his opponent, Democrat Shannon O'Brien, received an "A."
Romney's talk-show appearance came as he is trying hard to overtake Huckabee in Iowa and reclaim the lead he enjoyed for much of the year. Huckabee recently moved to the front of the Republican presidential field in Iowa, with the state's caucuses less than three weeks away on Jan. 3.
Romney has defended Bush against Huckabee's criticisms of his foreign policy. On Sunday, he went a bit further, labeling the charge "an insult" and calling on Huckabee to tell the president he was sorry. Huckabee leveled his criticism in an article in the journal Foreign Affairs.
"Mike Huckabee should apologize to the president," Romney said in response to a question.
Huckabee said Romney should read the article.
"It would really help if he would do that. Because if he did, he would see that there's no apology necessary to the president," Huckabee said on CNN's "Late Edition." Huckabee said he stood with Bush on tax cuts and sending more U.S. troops to Iraq when Romney did not.
"So, you know, I don't have anything to apologize for. But I'm running for president of the United States. I've got to show that I do have my own mind when it comes to how this country ought to lead, not only within its own borders but across the world," he said.
Willard Romney...Slick Willie 2.
I’d say Mitt and Huck are a matched set of book-ends about now.
Check out this video to see how firm Romney can be about his commitments...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_w9pquznG4
And then you match that video up with this statement of his:
...every piece of legislation which came to my desk in the coming years as a Governor, I came down on the side of preserving the sanctity of life.
And you are left wondering how you can believe anything he says, much less his campaign promises.
“Check out this video to see how firm Romney can be about his commitments...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_w9pquznG4"
Wonderful vid....Myth <-———As usual.
Doesn’t “deflects” imply that his ploy to throw off the people who criticize his flip-flopping worked?
Because if it does, it didn’t (work).
I understand what you’re saying.. may just be a case of an editor doing a little wordplay..
as an fyi, I combined the teaser headline and put it in parens behind the actual article title. The teaser read ‘Romney deflects flip-flopping charges’
So he is promising to sign another “Assault” Weapon Ban if elected. Sounds like a true conservative to me! /sarcasm
With the exception of Duncan Hunter and Tom Tancredo, I don’t believe there are any other Candidates who haven’t FLIP FLOPPED on some issue. A lot of pot-kettle-black going on lately.
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