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To: restornu
Mitt's father was always a part of the Civil Rights movement

And that's all Mitt had to say. To embellish it with false memories wasn't necessary, and is leading to him being his own worst problem.

When your credibility is your #1 liability, stop making stuff up!

161 posted on 12/21/2007 11:58:35 AM PST by kevkrom (All those in favor of Thompson, don't raise your hand.)
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To: kevkrom

Yada Yada yada


176 posted on 12/21/2007 12:07:59 PM PST by restornu (Harry Reid is going to get Daschled! You're on your own, Harry!)
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To: kevkrom

“I’m 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.” - Mitt Romney
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MmY1MTQyMTk0Yjk2ZDNmZmVmNmNkNjY4ODExMGM5NWE

“It’s exactly what Ronald Reagan did. As governor, he was adamantly pro-choice. He became pro-life as he experienced life.”
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293017,00.html

But, the most disingenuous claim Romney has made, and one that can be assessed for its truth, is his claim that he has grown in his abortion position just like Ronald Reagan did when Reagan was first confronted with the issue while Governor of California in 1967. Romney told Chris Wallace that as governor Reagan was “adamantly pro-choice,” and that Reagan “became pro-life as he experienced life,” and presumably as his governorship evolved.

Romney’s claim, however, is just patently false. Reagan’s most able biographer, Lou Cannon, has documented* that in contravention to Romney’s claim that Reagan was “adamantly pro-choice” Governor Reagan had never really given the abortion issue much thought before he took office. Cannon demonstrates that when Reagan was first confronted with abortion in 1967 he was unusually indecisive and had a difficult time deciding what he should do with a liberal abortion bill winding its way through the state house in Sacramento.

Cannon documents that after the abortion bill passed the California Senate, Reagan was asked by reporters during a press conference about his stance on the bill. When asked if he would sign the bill, Reagan answered, “I haven’t had time to really sit down and marshal my thoughts on that.” Such a reply certainly does not reveal an “adamant” position on the issue, as Romney claims Reagan held. Further, such indecision was not in any way a hallmark of the Reagan mode of operation.

In fact, Cannon writes that in 1968, the year after the bill passed, Reagan said that “those were awful weeks,” and that he would never have signed the bill if he had “been a more experienced governor.”

In light of the evidence it cannot be said that Reagan was ever an “adamant” pro-abortion supporter who later “grew” into an anti-abortion advocate. For Romney to invoke the spirit of Ronald Reagan in this way is a disgraceful attempt to co-opt the reputation of the most famous and successful politician of his age and an icon of the conservative movement to the aid of a candidate floundering on an issue. Mitt Romney’s abortion problem bears no resemblance at all to Ronald Reagan’s views “grown” or not.

Much can be said of Romney and his abortion problem. You can take him at his word that he “grew” into a more staunch pro-lifer or not. But one thing is absolutely sure; Mitt Romney is not like Ronald Reagan in any way, shape, manner or form.

http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/huston/070820


181 posted on 12/21/2007 12:12:06 PM PST by Josh Painter ("Managers are people who leaders hire." - Fred Thompson)
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