Ediblog.com
Selwyn Duke
Romney Reconstructed
©
2007 Selwyn Duke
With
the 2008 presidential campaign looming just on the horizon, speculation about
political fortunes abounds. On the
Democrat side, Lady Hillary is waiting in the wings, and the media’s profilers
have found their fair-haired boy in Barack Obama.
On the Republican side, the picture is murkier.
Often the Vice-president would be the logical choice to carry the
incumbent party’s torch, but Dick Cheney won’t be running and, even if he
did, he wouldn’t win. Of course,
Arizona Senator John McCain is still around, but he arouses suspicion among
conservatives. Seeming worn, tired,
erratic and untrustworthy, many think the old soldier should just fade away.
Enter
Mitt Romney. Inching ever closer to
a presidential run, the former CEO and outgoing Governor of Massachusetts is
emerging as the Barack Obama of the GOP. And
the analogy is apt. He has the
resonant voice, the good looks, the statesman-like bearing and, going Obama two
better, great hair and unobtrusive ears.
But
Romney shares another commonality with Obama: He’s a liberal in his party
masquerading as something more palatable. Yes,
sugar and spice and dealing the deck twice, that’s what little politicians are
made of.
As
to this point, another politico he can be compared to is Al Gore.
Like Gore, Romney has flip-flopped on abortion, only in the other
direction. While he now claims to be
pro-life, he supported legalization of the “morning-after” abortion pill,
RU-486. Moreover, as recently as his
2002 run for governor his platform stated,
“The
choice to have an abortion is a deeply personal one. Women should be free to
choose based on their own beliefs, not the government’s.”
Of
course, Romney says that his views have “evolved.”
But I strongly suspect his adaptation relates more to the evolution of
political ambitions than that of conscience.
Call me cynical, but unless you’ve been cloistered in an ancient
monastery for the duration, I’m very suspicious of deep personal growth
occurring between ages 55 and 59.
According
to Romney, unlike himself, the “paradigm” of marriage is not “evolving,”
and his high profile stand against anti-marriage has garnered him much publicity
of late. But here, too, Romney has
been about as consistent as March weather, with a track record that belies his
newfound traditionalism.
In
a letter
to the Log Cabin Republicans, Romney hailed Bill Clinton’s “don’t ask,
don’t tell” policy as a “step in the right direction” and “the first
of a number of steps” toward homosexuals serving “openly” in the military.
Then,
Brian Camenker points out the following in The
Mitt Romney Deception:
–
“Romney’s campaign distributed
pro-gay rights campaign literature during Boston’s ‘Gay Pride’ events,”
issuing pink fliers stating, “Mitt and Kerry [running mate Kerry Healey] wish
you a great Pride weekend! All citizens deserve equal rights, regardless of
their sexual preference.”
–
Romney advocated governmental recognition of homosexual adoption rights,
domestic partnerships and homosexual civil unions.
–
Romney opposed the Boy Scouts’ policy prohibiting homosexuals from serving as
scoutmasters and prevented the organization from participating publicly in the
2002 Olympics.
–
The Boston Globe wrote in 2005, “Governor Mitt Romney, who touts his
conservative credentials to out-of-state Republicans, has passed over GOP
lawyers for three-quarters of the 36 judicial vacancies he has faced, instead
tapping registered Democrats or independents – including two gay lawyers who
have supported expanded same-sex rights.”
–
Romney promoted homosexual propaganda in Massachusetts schools through the
“Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth,” funding this bureaucracy
of social engineering instead of eliminating it.
Thus,
it’s no wonder that while campaigning against Ted Kennedy in 1994, Romney said
that anti-marriage “is not appropriate at this time.”
My guess is that the time will be right when the electorate is left.
Equally
damning, though, is that in a very ominous way he can be compared to yet another
infamous poseur, Hillary Clinton. On
April 12, 2006, Romney signed a bill into law that creates a universal health
system intrusive enough to be the envy of socialists everywhere.
The plan mandates that every Ma. resident must obtain
health insurance by July 1, 2007, or face a fine that could exceed 1,200 dollars
a year. Of course, this scheme
includes the creation of a new bureaucracy, one that will, using Big Brother’s
infinite wisdom, determine how much you can afford to pay.
Wow, thanks for the help, Mitt. Or,
is it “Vinny the Chin”? I mean,
this sounds like an offer you just can’t refuse.
To
justify his socialist brainchild, Romney uses the argument that it is no
different from requiring people to carry car insurance.
Ah, speciousness, thy name is Romney.
Mr. Governor, you can choose not to own a car.
Everyone
must have a body.
But
remember this when Romney touts his credentials as a fiscal conservative.
While he may boast of his steadfast refusal to raise taxes, it rings
hollow when he turns around and mandates citizen expenditures and levies fines.
But liberals are adept at revenue-raising sleight-of-hand; when another
tax increase would raise voter ire, they simply deem it a toll, fine, fee or, I
love this one, a “surcharge.” I
prefer honest theft myself.
President
Bush is often excoriated for betraying his conservative base, a perception that
contributes to poll numbers lower than Ted Kennedy’s jowls.
Forgotten, however, is that while campaigning for the presidency in 2000,
Bush accused the Republican Congress of trying
“. . . to balance the budget on the backs of the poor,” a line that
could have been culled from Democrat talking points.
Folks, the president never cast himself as anything but exactly what he
is. We just weren’t listening.
Are
we listening now?
Ah,
those Massachusetts liberals: Frank, Dukakis, Kennedy and Willard Mitt Romney.
It just seems to roll off the tongue.
Bernie
Sanders for veep, anyone?
Selwyn Duke is a freelance writer out or Larchmont, NY. He has written for various publications including: IntellectualConservative.com, AmericanThinker.com and is a regular columnist for RenewAmerica.us.