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Why Romney Failed
National Review ^ | February 8, 2008 | Byron York

Posted on 02/08/2008 4:02:17 AM PST by monkapotamus

Why Romney Failed
Where was he coming from? Voters never really knew.

By Byron York

Washington, D.C. — It’s telling that Mitt Romney formally began his presidential campaign in Michigan and ended it in Washington, D.C. The man who made Massachusetts his home, who has lived there for 35 years, was its governor, and put his campaign headquarters in Boston, could never reconcile his past as a successful Massachusetts politician — a moderate — with the style of true-blue conservatism that he believed he would have to embrace to win the Republican nomination.

Last week, I was talking with a prominent political figure in South Carolina, working on a post-mortem of the Rudy Giuliani campaign. We moved to Romney and his problems in the state. Romney had poured millions of dollars and lots of time into South Carolina, yet it hadn’t worked out; shortly before the voting, Romney decamped to Nevada in part to distract from his failure in South Carolina. I asked if the simple fact that Romney was from Massachusetts, where Republicans have to lean left to succeed, had anything to do with it. The political insider told me that South Carolinians can relate a lot more to a New Yorker like Giuliani — they visit New York City and like it — than to a Massachusetts candidate like Romney. How could he win there and still be the conservative he appeared to be in South Carolina? “Massachusetts is Ted Kennedy,” the pol told me. “I heard it all the time about Romney: You’re from Massachusetts?”

Massachusetts, the place, meant something not entirely favorable to some conservative voters in South Carolina. But for Republicans across the country, Massachusetts was a symbol — a symbol of the problem at the heart of Romney’s candidacy: he was from one place, ideologically, and he acted as if he were from someplace else.

When Romney tried to present himself as the most conservative of conservative candidates — remember when he said, playing on Paul Wellstone’s old line, that he represented “the Republican wing of the Republican party”? — a lot of conservatives in Iowa and South Carolina and beyond didn’t quite know what to think. When they saw video of him in the fall of 2002 — not that long ago, during a debate in his run for Massachusetts governor — vowing to “preserve and protect a woman’s right to choose” five times in a relatively brief period of time, they didn’t quite know what to think. When they saw video of him almost indignantly saying that “I wasn’t a Ronald Reagan conservative” and “Look, I was an independent during the time of Reagan/Bush; I am not trying to return to Reagan/Bush” — they didn’t quite know what to think. And when they read the letter he wrote saying he would “seek to establish full equality for America’s gay and lesbian citizens” even more than Ted Kennedy, they didn’t quite know what to think.

Romney’s run from his past left a lot of voters asking: Who is this guy? He says he believes certain things deeply now, but he believed other things deeply not that long ago. And each time, it seems, his deeply-held beliefs jibed with what was most advantageous politically.

And now that he has left the Republican race, the question remains. What was Romney thinking? No one outside a very, very tight circle knows. He is an extraordinarily disciplined man, and during the campaign he applied that discipline to making sure that he never said anything too revealing or that might be taken the wrong way. So if you were a reporter, or a supporter, or anyone other than his wife and perhaps his children, and you thought that Romney revealed something special and private to you, you were most likely wrong.

Given that, no one knew what meant the most to Romney. What were the core values that lay deep inside him, things that meant so much that he would give up everything for them? Voters want to know that about a president; they piece together an answer by watching a candidate over time. With Romney it was hard to tell, so they were left to guess. For what it’s worth, my guess is that at the core of Romney’s being is his church and his family; if Romney were asked to surrender all his worldly success for them, he would.

I can’t answer the question any more definitively about John McCain. But if I had to guess, I’d say the things at his core are the United States of America and the defense of its national interest.

Romney made a lot of mistakes that didn’t seem like mistakes at the time. Drawing on his enormous success as a business consultant, he put together an impressively well-organized and professional campaign. That was good. But he never fully understood that the voters were looking for some spark in a candidate that connects him to them. Instead, Romney placed his faith in his magnificent organization and his PowerPoint analyses.

He hired a lot of people, spent millions to build organizations in key states, and then spent millions more for television and radio advertisements. The day after the Iowa caucuses, I dropped by WHO radio in Des Moines, and a top station official told me that Romney had been WHO’s second-biggest advertiser in 2007. (First was Monsanto farm chemicals.) In all, Romney pumped $1 million into WHO’s bank account. In South Carolina recently, a local politico marveled at how much money Romney’s in-state consultants made from the campaign. “Those guys made a mint out of him,” the politico told me. “It’s sinful how much they made.”

As a result of all that spending, Romney ran a campaign on a deficit, deeply in debt. Of course, it was in debt to Romney himself, who put $35 million of his own money into the campaign as of December 31, and likely a lot more since. All that money freed Romney and his team from making some of the tough decisions that other campaigns had to make every day. You could argue either way whether that was good or bad.

Just before the Iowa caucuses, I was at a corporate headquarters outside Des Moines, asking a few questions of Eric Fehrnstrom, the press secretary who usually traveled with Romney. Fehrnstrom looked at Mike Huckabee’s campaign and saw a ragtag lot. “We’re going up against a loose confederation of fair taxers, and home schoolers, and Bible study members, and so this will be a test to see who can generate the most bodies on caucus day,” Fehrnstrom said.

I interrupted for a moment. “Not that there’s anything wrong with any of those groups?” I asked.

“Not that there’s anything wrong, but that’s just a fact,” Fehrnstrom continued. “That’s just where he has found his support. I have a theory about why Mike Huckabee holds public events in Iowa like getting a haircut or going jogging, or actually leaving Iowa and going to California to appear on the Jay Leno show. It’s because he doesn’t have the infrastructure to plan events for him. And when he does do events in Iowa, he goes to the Pizza Ranch, where you have a built-in crowd, so you don’t have to make calls to turn people out. We’re very proud of the organization we have built in Iowa.”

They had reason to be proud; it was a good organization. But in a bigger sense, they just didn’t understand what was going on. Fehrnstrom, like his boss, placed a lot of faith in Romney, Inc. How could a bunch of seat-of-the-pantsers like the Huckabee campaign possibly beat the Romney machine? Well, they could, in Iowa, and McCain could in New Hampshire and South Carolina, and then in Florida and on Super Tuesday. The race was never about the imposing infrastructure Romney had built. It was about that ineffable something that voters look for in candidates. With Huckabee, some of those voters saw an intriguing and refreshing figure. With McCain, a larger number saw someone who wanted, above all, to defend the United States. And with Romney — well, they didn’t quite know what to think.



TOPICS: Editorial; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; byronyork; mittromney; romney
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To: xzins
It was over in terms of the math.

On CNN John King showed how even if Romney were to win all the remaining states, he would still lose.

All McCain would have to do to get enough delegates is to win at least 30% of the vote in every state.

Not difficult at all. Romney knew it wasn’t going to happen.

101 posted on 02/08/2008 8:47:00 AM PST by JRochelle ("But dad, Eli is copying me!" Peyton)
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To: UCFRoadWarrior
So...we now have a candidate who works w Massachusetts Sen Ted Kennedy....instead of someone merely living in the same state as Kennedy...

Uh, Flip and Teddy aren't exactly mortal enemies, either.


102 posted on 02/08/2008 8:48:38 AM PST by Antoninus (Looks like 2008 could be McCain vs. Hussein.)
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To: monkapotamus

Candidates must have the ability to know when their “handlers” are giving bad advice.

Romney’s farewell speech demonstrates that he was working with canned material, too oft repeated.

Had he written his own speeches and spoken from the heart, he’d still be running!


103 posted on 02/08/2008 8:52:04 AM PST by G Larry (HILLARY CARE = DYING IN LINE!)
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To: JRochelle

It depends on whether the remaining states are proportional states or Winner Take All (WTA) states.

My memory says I was read someplace that the bulk of the remaining states are WTA’s. I think the big prizes remaining are Texas, Ohio, Pennsylvania.


104 posted on 02/08/2008 8:55:24 AM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain -- Those denying the War was Necessary Do NOT Support the Troops!)
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To: xzins

No they are not. Most if not all are divided.

According to CNN. :)


105 posted on 02/08/2008 8:57:38 AM PST by JRochelle ("But dad, Eli is copying me!" Peyton)
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To: bigcat32
Christian Conservatives don’t vote for Mormons. The Christian Conservative vote went to The Huckster.

That's right. We Christians control the party. You better get used to it.

106 posted on 02/08/2008 9:09:35 AM PST by conservit
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To: JRochelle
according to CNN :)

LOL!

I agree....there's a source you can take to the bank.

107 posted on 02/08/2008 9:31:31 AM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain -- Those denying the War was Necessary Do NOT Support the Troops!)
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To: Etoo

I see that you just signed up, good for you. Based on your post I don’t think we’ll be talking much though.


108 posted on 02/08/2008 9:59:49 AM PST by wtc911 ("How you gonna get back down that hill?")
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To: ChessExpert

Exactly right, Mitt was dealing with Massachusetts politics.


109 posted on 02/08/2008 10:01:41 AM PST by wtc911 ("How you gonna get back down that hill?")
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To: UCFRoadWarrior
Holy crap on a stick batman you mean Mitt has been supported by Kennedy?
110 posted on 02/08/2008 10:05:22 AM PST by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: monkapotamus

“Romney . . . could never reconcile his past as a successful Massachusetts politician”

“. . . he was from one place, ideologically, and he acted as if he were from someplace else.”

“When Romney tried to present himself as the most conservative of conservative candidates — remember when he said, playing on Paul Wellstone’s old line, that he represented “the Republican wing of the Republican party”? — a lot of conservatives in Iowa and South Carolina and beyond didn’t quite know what to think. When they saw video of him in the fall of 2002 — not that long ago, during a debate in his run for Massachusetts governor — vowing to “preserve and protect a woman’s right to choose” five times in a relatively brief period of time, they didn’t quite know what to think. When they saw video of him almost indignantly saying that “I wasn’t a Ronald Reagan conservative” and “Look, I was an independent during the time of Reagan/Bush; I am not trying to return to Reagan/Bush” — they didn’t quite know what to think. And when they read the letter he wrote saying he would “seek to establish full equality for America’s gay and lesbian citizens” even more than Ted Kennedy, they didn’t quite know what to think.”

“Romney’s run from his past left a lot of voters asking: Who is this guy? He says he believes certain things deeply now, but he believed other things deeply not that long ago. And each time, it seems, his deeply-held beliefs jibed with what was most advantageous politically.”

This really says it all. Romney was defeated by his own words.


111 posted on 02/08/2008 10:18:40 AM PST by Lions Gate
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To: CharacterCounts

Thats a *really* good idea! And the solid red states should be ordered by Electoral votes or just how red they were? I say thresh hold them into 10 groups by the percentage of republican votes so this year would have been:

Utah
Wyoming
Idaho
Nebraska
Oklahoma

North Dakota
Alabama
Kansas
Alaska
Texas

Indiana
South Dakota
Mississippi
Kentucky
Montana

Georgia
South Carolina
Louisiana
Tennessee
North Carolina

West Virginia
Arizona
Arkansas
Virginia
Missouri

Colorado
Florida
Ohio
Nevada
Iowa

New Mexico
Wisconsin
New Hampshire
Pennsylvania
Michigan

Minnesota
Oregon
New Jersey
Delaware
Washington

Hawaii
Maine
Illinois
California
Connecticut

Maryland
New York
Rhode Island
Vermont
Massachusetts

I guess you could also tier them in groups then geographically match as much as possible...

e.g.

Instead of:

Utah
Wyoming
Idaho
Nebraska
Oklahoma

North Dakota
Alabama
Kansas
Alaska
Texas

Do this

Alabama
Kansas
Texas
Nebraska
Oklahoma

Alaska
Utah
Wyoming
Idaho
North Dakota

And so on


112 posted on 02/08/2008 10:19:45 AM PST by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: bigcat32

Christian COnservative dont vote for someone who ran for his last office on:

‘maintain the status quo with abortion’
‘Im not one of those NRA guys’

We dont vote for someone who trashes Regan in hopes he can out liberal Ted Kennedy... The cult of ‘They wont vote for Mitt because he is a Mormon’ completely ignores reality..


113 posted on 02/08/2008 10:21:57 AM PST by N3WBI3 (Ah, arrogance and stupidity all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari)
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To: AFreeBird

So many Republicans were too busy throwing their panties at Willard to recognize he is a liberal liar.


114 posted on 02/08/2008 10:25:36 AM PST by Petronski (I didn't leave the GOP. The GOP left me.)
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To: N3WBI3

The cult of ‘They wont vote for Mitt because he is a Mormon’ completely ignores reality.

There is no question that Mitt Romney lost votes because he is a Mormon. That is part of reality. He lost votes because of other positions he takes but being a Mormon hurt him in the eyes of many voters.


115 posted on 02/08/2008 10:32:05 AM PST by bigcat32
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To: xzins

“They don’t vote for guys who’ve run as liberals their entire political life, and then all of a sudden turn conservative just in time for a campaign in which they needed to be conservative.”

I agree.

Mitt Romney is neither Christian or Conservative and I’m not surprised he couldn’t win the nomination.


116 posted on 02/08/2008 10:37:06 AM PST by bigcat32
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To: monkapotamus
There were lots of reasons:

people jealous of his money
people jealous of his looks
people jealous of his accompilshments in the busniess world
his being a Mormon - some people think very small and are bigots
people NOT letting go when Hunter pulled out and then when Thompson pulled out and they never gave Mitt a chance when he HAS been moving more and more into being a good conservative. It was easier for too many to just keep playing the Judge and jury that Mitt had been an independent. To them they forget that even on here I have seen a lot of people say they used to be a Democrat, but for Mitt to have been a independent is a sin. sheesh

This is just my take on it. We lost the best of the last three candidates when Mitt stepped down. Very sad indeed.

117 posted on 02/08/2008 10:43:09 AM PST by Brandie (Just a Dittohead that loves America. NO to Traitor McCain and No to Huck the Hick)
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To: taildragger

George Washington never met a payroll.


118 posted on 02/08/2008 10:53:30 AM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain -- Those denying the War was Necessary Do NOT Support the Troops!)
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To: TexanAmerican

It wasn’t.

It was installed by a change of definition of words, using the existing law, by a ruling of the Supreme Court.

Notwithstanding some poor arguments otherwise.

He certainly had differing views about individuals that are gay than some conservatives, but never supported gay marriage or civil unions. (he ended up signing off on a marriage amendmend with civil unions, because that’s all he could get out of the pro-gay-marriage legislature — and then that same legislature ended up voting it down by 75%).


119 posted on 02/08/2008 11:29:09 AM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: wagglebee

Grew up was the wrong word, because as you said he grew up in Michigan.

He lived most of his ADULT life in Mass. That’s what I meant.


120 posted on 02/08/2008 11:30:16 AM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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