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Posted on 01/12/2012 5:05:10 AM PST by IbJensen
Dear Senator DeMint:
By the numbers, we are yet very early in the presidential primaries. 1144 delegates are needed to sew up the nomination, and depending how you count these things, Mitt Romney has maybe 13 delegates after finishing Iowa in a de facto tie with Rick Santorum and thumping Ron Paul in New Hampshire last night. But presidential primary races are often about perception: like wars, you more often win them by convincing the other side that further resistance is futile than by total, to-the-last-man annihilation. And so the coming South Carolina primary is widely recognized as the last realistic chance to stop Romney, or at least visibly slow his momentum and eliminate the divisions among conservative candidates that have thus far precluded a unified opposition. Romney has been lining up endorsements (including SC Governor Nikki Haley), money and favorable press from conservative journalists to create an air of inevitability that he hopes will end this race by Florida, if not South Carolina. I think it is fair to say that a great many grassroots conservative activists view the prospect of a Romney candidacy with varying shades of dismay.
We may yet, indeed, be stuck with Romney. And I know you were one of a good number of conservatives to endorse him in 2008 as a tactical move to stop John McCain, so the pull of some consistency (as well as longstanding disagreements with Rick Santorum) must be drawing you back to support him again. But even if we do end up with Romney indeed, especially if we do it will be terribly damaging for the conservative movement if you endorse or in any way assist him while there is still a race on. Let me explain why.
President George W. Bush was perhaps the third-most-conservative president of the past century, behind Reagan and Coolidge, and he commanded significant conservative loyalty for his wartime leadership, tax cuts and social conservatism. But we knew going into his nomination in 2000 that Bush was no friend of small government. In the shadow of war and later a financial crisis, Bush was able to pressure many otherwise conservative Republicans in Congress to back a lot of most un-conservative measures, most notably the expansion of Medicare to cover prescription drugs. In this, Bush has the help of GOP leadership, as men of conservative inclination and accomplishment like Santorum and Tom DeLay twisted arms to get conservatives to fall into line. Even if these moves were individually defensible under the circumstances, collectively they badly corroded the GOPs small-government brand, contributing significantly to the loss of Congress and many Governorships in 2006 (including Santorums 18-point loss and Romneys unwillingness to stand for re-election that year). What was needed, and what only began to emerge with your leadership late in Bushs term, was some voice inside Congress standing up for small government within the GOP.
We have made great strides since then together; the Tea Party movement has sent many conservative reinforcements to Congress, some of them at the expense of long-tenured Republican officeholders. But the battle even within the GOP for smaller government and entitlement reform is far from over.
Do not be that guy
Mitt Romney, as well all know, is not and never has been a Tea Party or small government conservative; indeed, his signature achievement in his one term in public office was passing a Ted Kennedy-backed universal health care plan that moved the most Democratic state in the nation to the left on healthcare and laid the groundwork for Obamacare. For Romney to win election against Barack Obama, something else will need to be done to motivate the grassroots activists who make up the Tea Party and related movements inside and outside the GOP. And for anything positive to be accomplished in getting our financial house in order during a Romney presidency, there must be an independent body of conservatives not beholden to Romney to apply pressure on him to pull him to the right. If there is one thing we know about Romney is that he is responsive to external pressures in making political and policy decisions. But if Romneys position in the party is secure and unchallenged, he will never have to give conservative concerns another moments thought, and will look as he did in Massachusetts leftward.
One by one, the organs of conservative journalism and activism and the leaders of Republican officialdom have begun placing themselves in Romneys orbit. If they will not stand up to him now, how will they do so later? And how can we convince dispirited activists that their concerns will still be represented in Romneys Washington?
The answer, if we end up resigned to Romney, is that they will look to you. For now, we can still sell a message to the grassroots: elect more conservatives to the House and Senate, and they will keep Romney honest with conservatives like Jim DeMint as their leaders. The goal of doing so will help us all: it will keep not-Romney activists motivated to vote and organize and donate at the House and Senate level, most of whom will then hold their breath and vote Romney as well, knowing they have done their part to provide a meaningful counterweight.
But the more those activists see interviews in which you seem to be feeding the pro-Romney inevitability narrative much less actually endorsing the man the more they will conclude that you are ready to play Tom DeLay to Romneys Bush, and that the lessons of 2006-10 will be completely forgotten in the new Washington. That would be a terrible shame, and poisonous to our ability to keep alive an independent movement that stands for something besides Mitt Romneys political advancement. Dont surrender your independent credibility when it will be needed most. We are ready to continue the good fight, but we cant do it without leaders.
Waste of time...DeMint and Romney are old political pals.
But it will be another nail in the GOP's coffin.
DeMint (like Ms. Haley) will soon discover that it takes YEARS to achieve
the connoation of conservative and yet only
one second of endorsing RINO ROMNEY
to lose it
forever.
It is just my opinion,but I would bet that Paul Ryan endorses Romney if it means defeat for Gingrich.
Gingrich is going down by his own devices. Another “I made a mistake and I am sorry” is not going to cut it.
I understand why Bolton might opt for Romney but DeMint? I don’t understand how he could...
Better yet, have ALL the primaries be CLOSED primaries, PERIOD. Problem solved.
Are we(many on FR) the only folks who believe Romney is a huge mistake???
Are us conservatives(less government,lower taxes) that much in a minority in the nation???
If this is true, liberty as we knew it is gone forever...
Yeah, for sure. His dumping on Romney and his experiences at Baine is making me want to puke. I'm further right (much further)than Romney but I'm of the ABO (anybody but Obama)segment of the Republican party so I'm going with Romney. I just finished watching Newt on Fox and Friends and his rude filibuster reminded me and I'm sure many others of what we don't like about Newt. So, go awaaay Newt, way awaaaay, pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeease...
At the risk of driving more people absolutely bonkers, have you has a chance to read the Codevilla piece I’ve been referencing constantly? :-)
Sigh. Had a chance....
13 delegates from states that each broke for Obama over Juan McCain by about 10%. I could care less about Iowa or NH.
No, I haven’t. What does it deal with?
...that further resistance is futile... And so the coming South Carolina primary is widely recognized as the last realistic chance to stop Romney, .... Romney has been lining up endorsements (including SC Governor Nikki Haley), money and favorable press from conservative journalists to create an air of inevitability that he hopes will end this race by Florida, if not South Carolina...
“Waste of time...DeMint and Romney are old political pals.”
I wish there were some columnists that would write long columns about how ridiculous it is that it is even possible for a candidate to pull off a win, when only 3 or 4 of 50 states have had their chance to vote for delegates to their respective state conventions. I guess it’s easier to whine to a Senator DeMint than to explain to readers how the convention system was set up to work, and how party insiders with the help of political professionals and mass media have destroyed it.
It is a truly great article!
“...have ALL the primaries be CLOSED primaries, PERIOD.”
I totally agree.
Gingrich didn’t make a mistake and he’s not sorry.
He’s calling attention to Romney’s wild mis-statements regarding his “experience at Bain” and his flat out lies in characterizing what he did, as well as his concealment of the fact that there was at least one deal where he seems to have made a profit after Bain had stripped out a company’s pension fund and the government had to come in with a bailout to the tune of millions of dollars. Romney has not explained any of those things.
Bolton indorsed Romney last night and will become a foreign policy advisor. DeMint endorsing Romney today
I will never respect anyone to puts politics over principles.
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