Posted on 01/25/2008 1:52:39 PM PST by Spiff
No American governor has faced more critical cultural issues than Mitt Romney, Massachusetts chief executive from 2003 to 2007. In the midst of Governor Romneys efforts to rescue his state from a fiscal crisis and create lasting and innovative health care solutions, activist judges and a far-left legislature forced issues of same-sex marriage, abortion, religious liberty, stem cell research, and gay rights into the forefront. Each time he was challenged, the Governor not only made the conservative choice, but also did so with an optimistic, unifying message. In doing so, he became a national leader on these vital cultural issues without squandering his ability to govern the Commonwealth. In four years, Governor Romney turned a deficit into a surplus without raising taxes, created a health coverage plan that is applauded by experts on both sides of the aisle and is designed to reduce costs while preserving personal choices, and effectively responded to the deadly collapse of one of the most expensive construction projects in American history. He did all these things in one of Americas most liberal states at the same time that he vetoed expansive stem cell legislation, vetoed the expansion of abortion rights in Massachusetts, defended the religious liberties of Catholic Charities from an assault by homosexual activists, and launched a multi-year (and multi-state) campaign to preserve traditional marriage after Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Courts decision to legalize same-sex marriage. In spite of this impressive conservative record, a group called MassResistance has been circulating a lengthy document called The Mitt Romney Deception. Combining old statements, half-truths, and some completely misreported stories, the document has gained some traction in the conservative community, with anti-Romney activists forwarding the document dozens of times (apparently without any independent verification of its facts). In much the way as urban legends gain traction through repeated e-mail forwards, the seriously-flawed MassResistance piece has led a few individuals to question the Governors commitment to conservative principles. MassResistances document, however, suffers from at least five fundamental errors. These errors are:
2. MassResistance indulges in an illogical reading of the Goodridge v. Department of Public Health same-sex marriage decision and thereby completely mischaracterizes the Governors response to the Massachusetts same-sex marriage crisis; 3. MassResistance fails to account for the Governors very real defense of religious liberty over the entitlement mentality of homosexual activists; 4. MassResistance falsely claims Governor Romney excluded the Boy Scouts from volunteering during the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics; and 5. MassResistance indulges in leftist-style identity politics by urging that Governor Romney (or any other Republican) participate in a search-and-destroy operation against any government-employed homosexuals.
The following represents the real truth about Mitt Romney. ABORTION Mitt Romney is pro-life, and his actions in office were consistently pro-life. MassResistance is correct when it notes that Governor Romney made many statements in 1994 that were supportive of abortion rights, but the Governor, by his own admission, was wrong when he made those comments. In the December 14, 2006, edition of National Review Online, Governor Romney said the following to NRO editor Kathryn Jean Lopez:
The Governor is correct that his actual record as governor is solidly pro-life. Governor Romney vetoed a bill that would have provided access to the so-called morning after pill, a medication that terminates living children after their conception. Moreover, the Governor vetoed expansive stem cell legislationlegislation that provided for the creation and destruction of human embryos at the whim of a researcher. In fact, it was this very debate that led to the Governors conversion on the life issue. As he told NROs Lopez:
As advocates for life, social conservatives should welcome changes like this, and we must recognize that some of the best advocates for life can be thoselike Ronald Reagan and Henry Hydewho were wrong in the past. MassResistance does its readers no service by placing more emphasis on quotes more than a decade old than it does on the Governors actual record in office. SAME-SEX MARRIAGE From the moment the activist judges in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court handed down their breathtakingly arrogant decision in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the Governor took strong and consistent actions to defend marriage. He also took decisive action to make sure his state would not grant marriage licenses to outof- state couples, thereby guaranteeing that Massachusetts would not become the Las Vegas of gay marriage (as he called it) and trigger a constitutional crisis as couples returned to their home states with Massachusetts licenses. He also initiated and led an effort to amend the Massachusetts constitution by referendum and has gone so far as to file suit against the Commonwealths own legislature after it took action to prevent the people of Massachusetts from voting on that amendmenta suit that resulted in the legislature complying with its constitutional responsibilities and sending the marriage amendment on to the next stage of the ratification process. Critically, he has become a leading national advocate for marriage, with his optimistic and uplifting message dominating the public debate. Rather than casting the debate as one over adult rights, the Governor has made the best possible case for marriage, noting what we all should know but too often forget (at great cultural cost): Marriage does not exist for the convenience and enjoyment of adults, but as the best possible way of raising and nurturing children. The credible defenders of marriage in Massachusetts all agree, and through their own statement they have recently and emphatically made their feelings clear: Mitt Romney has been an invaluable supporter and advocate. Yet despite this record, MassResistance claims that Mitt Romney actually enabled gay marriage by not defying the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusettsin other words, by not breaking the law. In a truly baffling bit of legal reasoning, MassResistance argues that the court ruling simply advised the Legislature to pass legislation codifying its opinion on changing the marriage statutes and that Governor Romney was therefore not bound to enforce same-sex marriage prior to legislative action. This is simply an incorrect reading of the decision. Here is what the Supreme Judicial Court actually said: We construe civil marriage to mean the voluntary union of two persons as spouses, to the exclusion of all others. In other words, the court itself changed the definition of marriage. The reference to legislative action in the opinion merely gave the legislature a chance to amend the law to state what the court already said it meant. This was not advising the legislature; it was changing the law. Any governor who defied this decision risked contempt of court. Rather than becoming what the media would undoubtedly call the George Wallace of gay marriage by standing in the courthouse door and barring couples from receiving marriage licenses, the Governor chose legal means to resist the courts decision. And his decision was correct. It is now clear that the Goodridge decision represented not the beginning of the end of traditional marriage but what may well be the high-water mark of the same-sex marriage movement. Since that decision, homosexual marriage activists have been on the defensive virtually everywhere, losing referenda and losing court decisions. Had Governor Romney not offered a principled and effective defense of marriage, the outcome may very well have been quite different. GAY RIGHTS The Governor believes all people should be treated equally in the eyes of the law, but that no additional legal protections for sexual orientation should be added. Since his race against Ted Kennedy in 1994, sexual orientation nondiscrimination laws have become commonplace across the country, and it is easy to see and understand their effects. Since 1994, these laws have been used as pretexts for ejecting Christian student groups from college campuses, for closing religious-based adoptive services, for silencing people of faith as they seek to debate issues of sexual morality, and for transforming marriage laws (see the New Jersey Supreme Courts recent decision). The Governor stated his position well on NRO:
Gov. Romney: No. I dont see the need for new or special legislation. My experience over the past several years as governor has convinced me that ENDA would be an overly broad law that would open a litigation floodgate and unfairly penalize employers at the hands of activist judges. As for military policy and the dont ask, dont tell policy, I trust the counsel of those in uniform who have set these policies over a dozen years ago. I agree with President Bushs decision to maintain this policy and I would do the same.
THE BOY SCOUTS The Governor has long been a strong supporter of the Boy Scouts, even sitting on its national board of directors. He has never taken any action to limit their activities. Any statement to the contrary is false. Particularly hurtful has been MassResistances claim that Governor Romney prevented the Boy Scouts from serving in the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics because of their stand on homosexual scoutmasters. Leading conservative attorney Jay Sekulow has thoroughly and completely debunked this claim: Brian Camenkers [of MassResistance] claim
that Romney Barred Boy Scouts from public participation in the 2002 Olympics is entirely false. There are several articles that directly contradict Camenkers conclusion. NewsMax.com, Camenkers source, did not even claim that Romney made the decision to bar the Scouts. In fact, Romney, at least at that time, sat on the Boy Scouts executive board. The Boy Scouts said that the NewsMax article was false. Even NewsMax admitted that the Olympic Committee said that there was an age restriction of 18 years old and up to be a volunteer. There are also inconsistencies in the two NewsMax articles, only one of which is cited by Camenker.
Since no major media source ran anything about this story, and the local media directly contradicted it, it appears that Camenkers claim is false. LEFTIST IDENTITY POLITICS Mitt Romney does not play the game of leftist identity politicswhich means he hires people on the basis of their abilities and qualifications, not on the basis of their identity. As a result, he has hired some well-qualified homosexual individuals to several positions in his administration. These people were hired because they were good at their jobs (and in the case of judges, tough on crime and faithful to the law as written), not because they identify as gay. It is the left that all too often hires and fires, includes and excludes on the basis of identity (for example, witness the profound disadvantages faced by whites and Asians in the college admissions process created by misguided racial quotas). Conservatives believe in hiring and firing on the basis of ability and qualifications. MassResistance would lead conservatives to believe they should adopt leftist goals and tactics by excluding any self-described gay person from governmenton the basis of self-described identity alone. Such a search and destroy effort is not only absurd and impractical, it is also immoraland unsupported by any leading national conservative. Ironically, it is the very tactic of excluding on the basis of sexual orientation that would make the outcry for including sexual orientation in federal nondiscrimination laws irresistible. Finally, MassResistance spends pages describing in lurid details the actions of low-level bureaucrats within the Romney administration (for example, citing support for certain gay pride parades and events by state education officials). Yet MassResistance fails to explain how the Governor condoned or even knew about these efforts. While a chief executive is responsible for the actions of its administration, in the real world, the chief executive of any state (much less a state with an entrenched liberal bureaucracy like Massachusetts) cannot and should not waste his time, effort, and limited political capital cleansing the expression and actions of minor state officials. Changes in bureaucracies occur only after time and only with legislative cooperationtwo instruments the Governor did not have. CONCLUSION MassResistance would have conservatives believe that Mitt Romneys words from twelve years ago are more relevant than his actions as Governor of Massachusetts. For the first time in many years, conservatives have a presidential candidate who not only shares their core political and moral values but can also communicate those values in a persuasive, compelling, andyesunifying way. We should not permit distortions, leftist-style scare tactics, and identity politics to obscure the truth about Mitt Romneya man of principle who is and will be the best conservative standard-bearer in 2008. David French is a co-founder of Evangelicals for Mitt (www.evangelicalsformitt.org), an independent website dedicated to spreading awareness about Governor Mitt Romney among Christian conservatives. David holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School and is a leading constitutional attorney. He lives outside Nashville with his family and worships at Zion Presbyterian Church, a congregation of the Presbyterian Church in America. E-mail: david@evangelicalsformitt.org
Mitt Romney: The Real Truth
David French 1. MassResistance fails to account for the Governors very real move to the prolife side of the abortion debate;
The centerpiece of the MassResistance presentation is a series of quotestaken primarily from Governor Romneys 1994 Senate campaign against Ted Kennedyand then the implication that these quotes (regarding abortion and gay rights) are indicative of his current political positions and his actions in office. Nothing could be further from the truth. A lot has happened since 1994, and as a result, the Governor has become firmly pro-life, opposes adding sexual orientation to federal employment nondiscrimination laws, and has been one of the nations foremost advocates for traditional marriage. To consider just a few events that led the Governor to change his mind: Nondiscrimination laws have been used to dramatically restrict fundamental First Amendment freedomsincluding the ability of Christian student groups to meet on campus and religious adoption agencies to place disabled children with appropriate families; an activist state supreme court unilaterally redefined marriage; and the growth of embryonic stem cell research has led to the commodification of human life. Faced with these realities, the Governor has consistently made the right choices. MassResistance ignores these choices. I believe people will see that as governor, when I had to examine and grapple with this difficult issue, I came down on the side of life. I know in the four years I have served as governor I have learned and grown from the exposure to the thousands of good-hearted people who are working to change the culture in our country. Im committed to promoting the culture of life. Like Ronald Reagan, and Henry Hyde, and others who became pro-life, I had this issue wrong in the past.
My position has changed and I have acknowledged that. How that came about is that several years ago, in the course of the stem-cell-research debate I met with a pair of experts from Harvard. At one point the experts pointed out that embryonic-stem-cell research should not be a moral issue because the embryos were destroyed at 14 days. After the meeting I looked over at Beth Myers, my chief of staff, and we both had exactly the same reactionit just hit us hard just how much the sanctity of life had been cheapened by virtue of the Roe v. Wade mentality.
Lopez: And what about the 1994 letter to the Log Cabin Republicans where you indicated you would support the Federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) and seemed open to changing the dont ask, dont tell policy in the military? Are those your positions today?
The Governors words are supported by solid and convincing actions. In 2006, he strongly defended the right of Catholic Charities to refuse to place adoptive children in homes with homosexual couples. In taking this stand, he opposed virtually the entire Massachusetts political establishment, but he was defending the fundamental freedom of people of faith to live out their values. Once again, Governor Romney made the right choice.
Actually there is, McInsane at least has a record that is justifiably being excoriated by the RNC and their operatives.
MYTH's record on judges, abortion, gun control, tax hikes, socialized medicine,gay marriage, etc are apparently OK with the country club republicans that are running the show.
After all, they don't give a rats ass as long as their paychecks and pensions and perks keep coming.
POWER is the name of their game and CONSERVATIVES be damned.
Very telling interview tonight with Tom Delay on the Levin show.
He endorses no one so far.
Neither does Limbaugh.
Wow, kinda sums up the whole deal-thanks for my new tag line!
Excellent! Thanks for posting... By the way, why wasn’t I on your ping list? (:-)
Funny, I was thinking the same thing several hours before reading this post. He's just mean enough to do it too.
McCain is older, 6 long years, and a whole lot less likeable as well. Romney is about 5 years younger than Thompson, while Huckabee is a realive baby born 8 years after Romney. (making him almost 6 years younger than me).
While I am just as against abortion as anyone---I won't be going around bombing clinics.
Mitt chose not to side with, not anti-abortion/anti-gay, but RADICALS within these groups.
Mitt wasn't radical enough for them so now he is a flip flopper liar. There is a big difference between an agenda and a radical agenda.
You and your defeatist ilk should go sulk in the corner. Luckily your kind is becoming vastly outnumbered... No wonder you’re becoming disgustingly shrill.
He's still a gun grabber. NYT hates him because he's not Hillary, and because he actually wants to protect the country against the Jihadists. They can't have that. But you are right, that is a point in his favor.
The responses I’ve gotten from people in this thread are examples of meanness and ignorance. Read my original post. I wasn’t bashing anyone, but trying to lay out facts. You guys have a bunch of emotional filters on ready to fire at anything that you gloss over quickly and decide to launch your verbal nukes at.
Read my post again. I never said this was my criteria. Never said I wouldn’t consider voting for him. Instead of projecting what you think I am saying, read what I actually wrote. Seriously, read.
Y’know bud, you are coming across like a hypersensitive whiny crybaby. You got a problem with what someone posts, my advice to you is - and try real hard to actually read what I write instead of what you think I’m saying - don’t reply to it in the first place.
If you actually took the time to read my first post objectively you would see I wasn’t trying to bash Mitt. But since you’re so amped up and hyper you can’t see it. Quit acting like a whiny, emotion-based, touchy-feely liberal.
Regardless of their biological age, Mitt Romney looks years younger than his age.
Romney is in excellent shape. He looks fit, trim, well rested, and it doesn't hurt that he is handsome and has a head full of hair.
Huckabee looks frumpy. His suits don't fit. He has that jowled look when he talks, like his his cheeks are flapping like a cartoon character hounddog. (not trying to be petty, just saying what I see.
Yes, Fred has lost some weight, but ironically, that makes him look haggard and skeletal. Fred has huge bags under his eyes, and his lack of hair makes him look older than his true age.
McCain has that lymph node bulging thing, which he had removed recently.
But have you noticed lately how McCain's left eye is squeezing shut ever so slowly.
McCain has had skin cancer removed frequently, I think.
Guiliani just looks like a prison camp guard from a WWII movie.
Which leaves Romney. Some people say he looks plastic. I think he looks a little stiff sometimes, but damn -- for 60 the man is in excellent shape.
Romney looks 10-15 years younger.
If we are honest, most of us are more conservative now than we use to be! Conservatism should come with life experience, age and wisdom. I would say I am LOTS more conservative now, than I was 5 years ago...certainly more than I was 10 or 20 years ago.
I believe Romney supports life, is a great business man,has very strong moral convictions, and will surround himself with a very competent cabinet. He may not be 100 per cent "pro ALL guns", but I do believe he will defend the second amendment.
I also think he can run rings around Hillery in a debate!
Anti gun, illegal hiring, tax rasing romney is no conservative and has never has been.
I pretty much agree with your summations here.
McCain’s left cheek must be the physical place where he stuffs down all the anger to. One day that puupy is gonna explode. It almost did with the Amnesty thing.
In Rush’s McCain voice: “IT ISN’T AMNESTY! THERE’S A FINE!!!”
Aren’t you the prissy little one — tieing yourself up in knots fussing about people’s underwear (as if it’s your business). Tell me, have you ever had the guts to make fun of someone’s underwear to their face? Or do you just hide behind your computer to do your trash? Of all the problems facing our nation today, you worry about underwear? That speaks more of who and what you are.
Again, what criteria do you use in choosing a presidential candidate? I’m sorry, I didn’t see that in any of your other posts — and I’m wondering if some of them were removed...
Romney may be a Mormon, but at least he’s NOT A MUSLIM!!!
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