Gov. Mitt Romney Denies ‘Flip-Flop,’ Says He’s Opposed to Gay Marriage and Abortion

The AP reports that Republican Gov. Mitt Romney, who we all know is weighing a White House bid, dismissed criticism that he has flip-flopped on the issues of gay marriage and abortion and reaffirmed his opposition to both. Democrats are hoping to use the powerful the same accusation of being unprincipaled and not really standing for anything, against Romney, who is suspected to become an instant favorite amung Republicans if he can only assure them on these two key issues.

Romneys explanation is not rocket science: “Like the vast majority of Americans, I’ve opposed same-sex marriage, but I’ve also opposed unjust discrimination against anyone, for racial or religious reasons, or for sexual preference,” Romney said in an interview with the National Review magazine published online Thursday. Indeed, his record on gay rights is unusually strong for a conservative Republican, however that is unlikely to matter to his critics in an age where it is acceptable to be against same sex marraige (like Bill and Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama), but you quickly become a bigot and hater if you support allowing citizens to vote on the matter (like Mitt Romney has recently fought for).

Regarding abortion, Romney said — as he has said previously — that although he campaigned for governor as an abortion-rights supporter, he changed his position several years ago after being briefed on embryonic stem-cell research.

“I’m committed to promoting the culture of life,” the Massachusetts governor told the conservative magazine. “Like Ronald Reagan and Henry Hyde and others who became pro-life, I had this issue wrong in the past.”

The comments were Romney’s first public explanation of his stance on the two key social issues since the publication last week of a 1994 letter — sent in the final weeks of his failed campaign against Sen. Edward M. Kennedy — in which he cited his sensitivity to the concerns of Log Cabin Republicans, the party’s gay group.

“As a result of our discussions and other interactions with gay and lesbian voters across the state, I am more convinced than ever before that as we seek to establish full equality for America’s gays and lesbian citizens, I will provide more effective leadership than my opponent,” Romney wrote in the letter.

The AP also notes however, that during that same campaign, Romney also stated his personal opposition to abortion, but said he would not seek to change state abortion laws. As proof, he cited his mother’s own 1970 candidacy for the U.S. Senate as an abortion rights supporter.

Giuliani Taps RNC’s DuHaime for 2008 Team

Conservative magazine Newsmax reports that former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has named Michael DuHaime, political director of the Republican National Committee, to head his presidential exploratory committee.

DuHaime headed political operations for the RNC this year and served as a regional political director for President Bush’s re-election campaign in 2004, the New York Sun reports.

Last week Giuliani hired Sandra Pack, another top official from Bush’s re-election campaign, to become the chief financial officer of his exploratory committee.

Giuliani filed papers with the Federal Election Commission in November to set up his committee, which allows him to raise money and travel the country to gauge support for a presidential bid without formally declaring himself a candidate.

In addition to Giuliani, GOP Senators John McCain of Arizona and Sam Brownback of Kansas have also formed exploratory committees.

The hiring of DuHaime, 33, comes several days after McCain met in New York with dozens of party donors from the former mayor’s backyard, the Sun notes – including some who have contributed to Giuliani in the past.

National Review asks: Could it Be Brownback?

Of all the GOP presidential contenders who could claim to have benefited from the recent midterm elections, Brownback may be the one for whom it is most true. For years, the social conservatives who brought down Miers have been having a fierce intramural debate on the merits of pragmatism versus purity.

In the run-up to 2000, they resolved that debate in favor of the former, and the movement threw its support behind George W. Bush over conservative long shots like John Ashcroft and Gary Bauer. But, now, conservatives appear to have the worst of both worlds: Six years of disappointments on issues like abortion and gay marriage have resulted in a midterm rout and a lame-duck presidency. Purity is looking more attractive by the day.

All the more so when you consider that the early GOP front-runner is John McCain, a man who still makes some social conservatives sputter with rage. If present trends continue and the Republican establishment embraces McCain, conservatives could choose to rally around a more acceptable alternative–that is, if they can find one. Lame-duck Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has already pulled the plug on his presidential ambitions. As of January, Pennsylvania’s Rick Santorum and Virginia’s George Allen are both ex-senators. And, while Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney may have escaped the midterm fallout, he is Mormon–a religion many evangelical Christians regard as a cult.

Brownback, by contrast, is closing in on a decade as the leading social conservative in the U.S. Senate. He has impeccable credentials on issues like judges, abortion, and gay marriage. (And, for that matter, any combination of the three: He has threatened to hold up the nomination of a Michigan judge because she once attended a lesbian commitment ceremony.) And Brownback’s leadership of the VAT gives him extraordinary day-to-day influence over the Senate’s social conservative agenda.

There are crasser considerations, too. Brownback was an evangelical Christian before he converted to Catholicism. Iowa has large populations of both. Brownback’s home in Topeka is a four-hour drive from Des Moines, giving him as close to a natural foothold in the state as any GOP contender will have. And, as a long-serving state agriculture secretary and former Future Farmers of America official, Brownback is as fluent in the language of ethanol subsidies and biodiesel production as any politician reared outside Iowa. Put this together, and you have a guy who could theoretically take one of the top two spots in the state’s first-in-the-nation caucuses. With the Internet’s track record of making juggernauts out of grassroots icons, even a third-place finish could give Brownback an E-Z Pass lane straight through to the final stages of the race. If everything breaks right, and social conservatives are particularly aggrieved over their party’s standard bearer, Brownback could end up on the national ticket.

Brownback, in other words, is on the brink. He is savvy. He is righteous. He is committed. He would appear to have been born for this moment in politics. But looks can be deceiving, because birth is not at all how Brownback came by his place in the conservative cosmos. As recently as 1994, the year of his first campaign for Congress, Brownback was a member in good standing of the moderate Republican establishment. But, by the time he arrived in Congress that fall, he was emitting so much anti-government zeal he gave Newt Gingrich the willies. Within two years, Brownback had another epiphany, from which he emerged as a crusader for Christian causes.

Which raises a question for conservatives mulling a Brownback candidacy: Has the Kansas senator been finding himself? Or has he been finding himself a way to run for president?

Read the full Article HERE

Attacks on Romney Strike Out 2 in a Row

Bloomberg writes up GOP Gov. Mitt Romney’s emergence as the alternative to McCain, noting how Romney has been courting conservatives, has avoided rookie mistakes, conveniently left the country before the Iraq Study Group report came out, and “aims to reconstitute [Bush’s] coalition.” He wants to attract “evangelical Christians with his support for a gay-marriage ban, and will try to lure economic conservatives with plans to overhaul health care and the tax system.” He also seems to be trying to set up sharp contrasts with McCain on immigration reform — he “stresses tough border enforcement over a new guest-worker plan” — and possibly on taxes.

Mitt Romney

Attacks on Romney have emerged with an unusually hard tone for being this early on a candidate who hasn’t even announced his candidacy yet. Recently, the Boston Globe trumped up charges that Romney hired gardeners who themselves hired illegal aliens, implying that Romney should have investigated and uncovered this (a brazen act which no doubt would have been equally if not more criticized) and his aspirations for president would be ruined by this shocking detail (wishful thinking).

Now a Boston-based gay newspaper has revived comments Romney “made during his 1994 Senate bid, in which he said the gay and lesbian community ‘needs more support from the Republican Party,'” per, again, the Boston Globe. In a 1994 interview with that paper, “Romney said it should be up to states to decide whether to allow same-sex marriage and he criticized Republican ‘extremists’ who imposed their positions on the party” even though he also he personally opposed gay marriage. Critics are charging this as a shift in position, hoping that readers will not notice that no actual shift has taken place.

The punchline is that twelve years later, in a recent interview with the DC Examiner, Romney “accused McCain of being ‘disingenuous’ on same-sex marriage, because McCain says he’s against [a constitutional ban of gay marriage] but believes states should decide the issue.” The criticism on Romney, in case you missed it, is that he appears to be criticizing Mccain for not falling in line with what he himself called “extremist” behavior by Republicans. This attempt at a criticism of course relies on the shallow memory of the reader, who, in order to believe this is a disingenuous line on Romney’s part must forget that 12 years ago “gay marriage” was not even heard of as an issue. Indeed, 12 years ago, anyone overly concerned about gays getting married would have been a kook in a time where there was no mass demand for it, no legal controversies over it and a liberal Democrat president named Bill Clinton had signed the “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy (which kept gays in the military closeted) and was on his way to sign DOMA (the Defense Of Marriage Act, which defined marriage as between a man and a woman).

Since those 12 years when Romney wrote that letter, same-sex marriage has been forced onto the public by unelected judges in defiance of the people’s will, turning an issue that the majority of the country didn’t care about 12 years ago into an issue that 87% of the country feels strongly about. In 2004 for instance, voters in 11 states approved constitutional amendments codifying marriage as an exclusively heterosexual institution. The amendments won in Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Ohio, Utah and even heavily blue-state Oregon, the one state where gay rights activists had hoped to prevail. The amendments passed with a 3-to-1 margin in Kentucky, Georgia and Arkansas, 3-to-2 in Ohio and 6-to-1 in Mississippi. Bans passed by narrower margins in Oregon, about 57 percent, and Michigan, about 59 percent.

Although Mitt Romney supports gay rights, as he did 12 years ago, he does not support the re-defining of what marriage is, as he didn’t 12 years ago. While Governor of Massachusetts, Romney had no friction with gay activists until his last months in office when the legislature violated the Massachusetts Constitution by refusing to vote on an amendment that would allow the state’s citizens to vote on the definition of marriage.

So far the two major attacks on Romney (that he vicariously hired illegal immigrants, and that he supports allowing the citizens to vote on matters important to them) appear to have only helped energize support for him. Perhaps these failures will move 08 criticism in the direction of actual challenges on the wisdom or merit of ones beliefs instead of cheap “gotcha” games… and perhaps Governor Pataki will win in a landslide *snicker…

GOP Hopefuls Work to Clearly Define Themselves

MSNBC’s Huma Zaidi blogs that the Los Angeles Times front-pages the “frenzied competition” among Republican presidential candidates over which of them will inherit “a fundraising and vote-getting machine built by the [Bushes] over the years into one of the most valuable assets in modern politics.” More: “Adding to the drama, a sibling divide appears to be emerging” as some key members of Gov. Jeb Bush’s “tight-knit inner circle have signed up to help Romney while several of President Bush’s senior strategists have gone to McCain.” ,

The New York Daily News covers McCain’s tough speech on Iran to a pro-Israel crowd in Manhattan, Rudy Giuliani’s home turf. “Although he called war with Iran a last resort, he added, ‘There is only one thing worse than a military solution, and that, my friends, is a nuclear-armed Iran.’”

Anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, who has ties to imprisoned lobbyist Jack Abramoff, is telling reporters that “‘envoys’ for Sen. John McCain (R) have reached out to him several times in the past year to reach a detente in advance of the Arizonan’s likely presidential campaign,” which McCain’s top political adviser dismisses as “delusional,” Roll Call reports.

Outgoing New York Gov. George Pataki (R) says he will decide at the beginning of next year whether he’ll run for president, the New York Times says.

Trent Lott holds function for President Mccain

Newly elected Senate Republican Whip Trent Lott will host a 10 a.m. coffee session for invited Republican guests Tuesday at the Phoenix Park Hotel on Capitol Hill in Washington to discuss Sen. John McCain’s impending campaign for president with him and McCain.

Lott, a supply-sider and social conservative, had not been allied with McCain previously. However, in his e-mailed invitation, Lott asserted, “John and I have been friends for many years, and my respect for him is unparalleled.” Tuesday’s meeting with McCain, Lott said, will “begin to build an organization that focuses not on our differences, but on our shared goals for peace and prosperity for this nation.”

A footnote: New York investment banker Ken Langone is hosting a fund-raising cocktail reception for former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani’s prospective presidential campaign the evening of Dec. 19 at the Marriott Marquis Hotel ballroom in Manhattan. The price: $2,100 per person and $4,200 per couple.

Source: excerpt from Robert Novak Column

Romney Fights for Marraige Vote (VIDEO)

In the video below, Governor Mitt Romney addresses a rally at the Massachusetts State House calling on the legislature to vote on a marriage amendment. The ballot initiative would allow the state’s citizens to vote on the definition of marriage. This is strongly opposed by most hard-leftists because every time citizens are allowed to vote on how their society defines marraige, even the bluest of blue states vote to keep it Man-Woman. Currently the legislature is refusing to allow their constituents to vote on the matter, violating the Massachusetts Constitution.

Although this issue has been proven to not be a left vs right divide (virtually every democrat in congress is against gay marraige), the right is more often smeared as being “anti-gay” for holding this position. Although Mitt Romney has enjoyed a record of being moderate on gay issues while Governor of one of the most liberal states in the union, his current attempt to enforce democracy has earned him a slew of attacks from the left.

However, despite his critics attempts at using this to create a distaste with voters’ association with him, it is difficult to see how this action can do anything but help him. The divide is made painfully clear as Romney reminds his constituents that the founders of the country trusted “the voice of the people, rather than the wisdom of a king”. If Romneys critics strike out on the “don’t vote for him because he wants you to have too much say in how your society is formed” angle, will the “don’t vote for him because he employed someone who employed someone who was not in this country legally” angle work? We all shall see…

Tucker: Can Rudy Get the Nomination?

Air America host Rachel Maddow and Tucker Carlson discuss Rudy Giuliani’s presidential aspirations. Tucker see’s a Rudy nomination as a sell out on issues, Rachel thinks he’s a flip flopper, but they both agree that Guliani would be nothing but a continuation of Bush policy.

HIGHLIGHTS:

-Carefully cultivated tough-guy image?
-Cronyism and corruption problems redux?
-Liberal masquerading as a conservative? (just like Bush?)
-Rachel Maddow, a lesbian, calls Guliani “physically hideous”