Mitt Romney should write off his health-care plan as a mistake that Democrats have made worse.
Associated Press
Mitt Romney (left) congratulates Scott Brown on election night.
Scott Brown's victory in Massachusetts has most Republicans hopeful about midterm elections. It has Mitt Romney hopeful about 2012.
In many ways, the former Bay State governor never ended his 2008 presidential campaign. From a perch atop his Free and Strong America PAC, Mr. Romney has been raising money, nurturing his team, keeping himself in the national spotlight. With the Massachusetts Senate race, he sensed an unexpected opportunity to step to the front of the GOP presidential ranks.
He played it nicely. Aware that many voters have mixed views of his governorship, Mr. Romney stayed in the shadows, leaving other notables to stump with Mr. Brown. Behind the scenes was a different story.
Mr. Romney headlined fundraisers for the little-known state senator and used his own national mailing list to help raise dollars. He called on supporters to make calls on Mr. Brown's behalf, and he harnessed his media operations to bolster the candidate.
His closest aides flooded to Mr. Brown, bringing with them the savvy of a national operation. Beth Lindstrom, a cabinet official in the Romney administration, served as Mr. Brown's campaign manager. Also in Brown HQ were Beth Myers, Mr. Romney's presidential campaign manager, and Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom, who worked on the now-famous TV spots showing a tax-cutting John F. Kennedy morphing into Mr. Brown.
Mr. Romney got his due on election night. He was the first political figure Mr. Brown thanked for helping "show us the way to victory." Romney allies had already been busy touting his role. "There's no one who has done more behind the scenes and in front of the scenes than Mitt," Republican National Committee member Ron Kaufman told Politico—two days before the election.
By midweek, the political pundits decreed Mr. Romney the other big winner. Some went so far as to credit him with the 41st vote, potentially saving the nation from ObamaCare. In doing so, they unwittingly touched on the flip side of this week's race. For all the benefits this contest held for the former governor, it also churned up what will prove the biggest obstacle to Romney 2012. (Emphasis added)
[snip]
The state plan has become a millstone for Mr. Romney, yet he has refused to disavow it. Had he campaigned with Mr. Brown he'd have undoubtedly been asked about it, and undoubtedly given an answer as unsatisfying as those to date.
Mr. Romney has at times put forward selective data suggesting the program's costs aren't exploding. At other times he has complained his state hasn't done enough to control costs. By October of last year he was arguing on CNN that "We . . . didn't have any pretense we would somehow be able to change health-care costs in Massachusetts." This, despite promising in 2006 that under his plan "the costs of health care will be reduced."
Through it all, Mr. Romney has never backed away from his individual mandate, which requires people to buy insurance or pay a fine. Yet Republicans and independents despise the mandate, with many believing it is downright unconstitutional.
Mr. Romney's subsidized coverage is meanwhile doing what entitlements do: crowding out private insurers, compounding the cost explosion, walking the state toward rationing. So long as the former governor clings to these central points of his health plan, he's on the wrong side of free-market policy and public opinion. (Emphasis added)
That might be why in December Mr. Romney shifted again, saying his program differed significantly from ObamaCare in that it "solved" the "problem" at the state level, and featured no public option. But the public option argument has gone poof. And while GOP primary voters care about federalism, most will be hard pressed to parse the difference between a failed state program and a failed federal one. (Emphasis added)
This ugly fact, take note, nearly swept up the Brown candidacy. A week before the election, Fox News's Neil Cavuto dared ask Mr. Brown how he could oppose Washington's plan, given that he voted for RomneyCare as a state legislator. Mr. Brown—perhaps unwilling to upset his political patron—claimed that they were "two different programs." He argued that the Massachusetts plan, in contrast to ObamaCare, was a "free-market enterprise." Lucky for Mr. Brown, the liberal blogs didn't seize on his comments until too late. But he'll be asked for further explanation in Washington. (Emphasis added)
This is very interesting. I wonder how Scott Brown will reconcile having been for the Romney health care plan and now against Obamacare.. once he gets to Washington.
As to Romney.. Well, I have significant reservations about Romney. I find his smile fake. Look at the picture!
But I have a GOP friend who swears by Romney! Always interesting to talk to that guy!
-- Edited by Sanders on Friday 22nd of January 2010 01:26:29 AM
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
I had the opportunity to meet Romney twice during the 2008 election when I worked on the McCain/Palin ticket. That smile you see in the picture isn't fake - it's real. Romney LOVES to work the crowd, meet people, and press the flesh. He's a nice enough guy but I wouldn't vote for him simply because he took an uncalled for, sexist shot at Palin last year in regards to her being voted one of the 100 most influential people. I'm pretty sensitive after the way Hillary and Palin were treated and I'm not going to support someone who degrades women, even if they don't mean it the way it sounds. And that's precisely what I told Romney's people when they called me about his PAC.
Yes, we need to gather as many facts as possible about Romney to develop this profile.. Yes, I recall he put her down. Do that to one, he can do that to others. That's not a good thing in a person.
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
Sanders, no it is not a good thing in a person. I expected more from Romney and he really screwed himself with me. If he trundles through my area in the future on any campaign stops and I can get close enough to speak with him, guess what I'm going to ask him about?
I would just be surprised if Romney even recognized that what he said was offensive to women. I'm guessing he sees women as secondary, less than, and preferably, in the kitchen. JMHO
-- Edited by freespirit on Saturday 23rd of January 2010 10:27:09 AM
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It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less. ~Susan B. Anthony