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The Conservative Case Against Mitt Romney (2011 Edition)
Written By : John Hawkins

It’s no accident that Mitt Romney has done so well during this election cycle. He has excellent name recognition, he’s extremely well organized, he’s a great fundraiser, he’s become a polished debater, and he’s not gaffe prone. His business experience doesn’t hurt either, although it is worth noting that the only reason he’s able to brag that he’s not a “career politician” is because he lost to Ted Kennedy for the Senate and probably would have lost in 2008 had he run for governor of Massachusetts again.

All that being said, there’s a reason why Mitt Romney has been unable to walk away with the nomination despite all of those advantages. It’s because Mitt is a deeply flawed candidate. Yes, he would certainly be better than Obama (and I will vote for him if he gets the nomination), but this IS NOT someone conservatives should want as their nominee.

Why?

1) Romneycare: One of the biggest issues the Republican Party has to run on in 2012 is Obamacare. Although Mitt Romney does oppose Obamacare, it’s purely a political calculation because he still supports Romneycare in Massachussetts. Sure, there are a few differences, but it’s also fair to say that Obamacare is just Romneycare on a larger level. Even Mitt’s consultants on Romneycare, like Jonathan Gruber, have admitted that Obamacare is just Romneycare writ large,

The truth is that the Affordable Care Act is essentially based on what we accomplished in Massachusetts. It’s the same basic structure applied nationally.

In 2008, when Romneycare was still in its infancy, Romney might have been able to sell his experience with healthcare as a plus to the American people. However, we now know that his signature issue has been a miserable failure that has increased insurance rates in Massachusetts to the highest level in the whole country. Moreover, are the American people going to buy that the GOP’s opposition to Obamacare is anything more than politics as usual if we have a nominee who still supports “Obamacare 1.0?” Can we even trust Mitt to really fight Obamacare since he obviously supports the basic principles behind it?

2) Mitt Romney is pro-Tarp and open to more bailouts: Like Herman Cain, Mitt Romney was in favor of TARP. However, Herman Cain admits he made a mistake in backing the program because he didn’t like how it was implemented and he’s against more bailouts. On the other hand, Romney is still in favor of TARP and worse yet, he noted at the last debate that he is open to doing EVEN MORE bailouts, which should scare the living hell out of people.

The dirt hippies, anarchists, and Commies at the Occupy Wall Street protests would have already been laughed off the national stage already except for one thing. There’s widespread agreement across the political spectrum that the Wall Street bailouts were a crock. Do we really want to take that issue off the table for 2012 by running a pro-TARP Republican against the President who was just as responsible for the Wall Street bailouts as Bush was? Are we okay with having a nominee who’s open to funneling even more of your money over to corporations that are treating capitalism as a “heads, we win; tails, the taxpayers lose” game?

3) Mitt Romney’s not a conservative: It’s hard to criticize Mitt Romney’s position on the issues because he shifts around so much you never really know where he stands on anything. One day he’s pro-amnesty. The next day, he’s not. One day he’s pro-choice; the next day he’s pro-life. One day he believes humans are the cause of global warming; the next day he’s not sure about it. One day he’s pro-gun control; the next day, he’s a staunch advocate of the 2nd Amendment. One day he’s disassociating himself from Ronald Reagan and the Contract with America; the next day he wants to assure you that both are close to his heart. While it is okay for politicians to change their mind from time to time and conservatives are sometimes too unwilling to “take ‘yes’ for an answer” from a politician, in Romney’s case, his positions have shifted so much, on so many issues, that it’s impossible to take anything he says at face value.

George W. Bush was more of a Country Club Republican than a movement conservative, but in fairness to the man, you did always know where he stood. In Romney’s case, you really have no idea where he stands on anything because like Obama, every policy position has an expiration date. If I had a dime for every time conservatives complained about politicians like Romney — who talk a good game about conservatism when they’re running for office and then turn right around and sell us down the river once they get elected — I’d have enough money to give Mitt Romney a campaign contribution so I could qualify for the next round of bank bailouts.

4) He’ll run weak in the South: Slick moderate northerners like Mitt Romney generally don’t do well in the South and given his poor poll numbers in the southern states during the 2008 primaries, there’s no reason to think Romney would be an exception.

Could we see Romney lose states like Virginia, North Carolina, or maybe even Georgia that other candidates like Perry or Cain would probably pick-up? Absolutely. Of course, it might be worth it if Romney could pick up northern states that those candidates couldn’t, but so far there’s no evidence that Romney could put any new states in play, including his home state of Massachusetts.

5) Romney’s not likable: Here’s a little not-so-secret secret: Very, very few people get excited about the idea of Mitt Romney becoming President. His strong poll numbers are almost entirely a result of high name recognition and uncertainty about whether his competitors in the race are ready for prime time.

Of course, there are big Mitt fans out there, but personally, I don’t know any conservatives who aren’t professional political operatives who seem to be excited about the idea of having Mitt as our candidate — and why would they be? A soulless, plastic Ken doll whom nobody trusts because he’ll say anything it takes to get elected isn’t going to get anyone’s blood pumping.

This is a little frightening because if you go all the way back to at least 1972, the more likable candidate has won every presidential election. Who’s more likable, Mitt Romney or Barack Obama? At best, that’s a toss-up at this point, which doesn’t bode well for Mitt’s chances to win.

6) The Mormon Factor: Mitt Romney’s religion has been an insignificant factor in the primaries. It has come up here and there, but no one has made a really big issue of it. That won’t be the case if he gets the nomination.

It Mitt Romney becomes the nominee, there will be a non-stop, year-long campaign run by the mainstream media and Hollywood to convince people that Mormons are dangerous, magic-underwear-wearing, multiple-wife-having, racist, potentially violent, scary, kooky cultists. The Obama campaign will never have to touch the issue, which is good, because Jeremiah Wright’s America-hating, anti-Semitic, Black Liberation Theology church isn’t an example of mainstream Christianity either.

But, getting back to Mormons — in large swathes of the country, they’re not looked at any differently than Jehovah’s Witnesses or Scientologists. In other words, they are not considered to be part of a mainstream Christian religion. Although Americans have been perfectly willing to vote for Mormons in Congress, there will be Christians who are worried that having a Mormon president might draw people away from Christianity into what they regard as a cult. The poll numbers on this issue previously have been austere and there’s no reason to think things have changed during this election cycle.

For example, a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll back in June of 2006 found that 37 percent of Americans said “that they would not vote for a Mormon presidential candidate.” Similarly, in a February of 2007, USA Today poll, 24% of American adults flat out said that they would not vote for a Mormon who ran for the presidency.

Those numbers, which are none too cheery for Mitt backers become even more grim when you consider the very real possibility that many of the people who say that they won’t vote for a Mormon may be Christians who typically vote Republican, but won’t cast their vote for someone whom they consider to be part of a cult. This survey of Christians at ChristiaNet.com would seem to support that theory. 59% of the 2000 Christians surveyed “claimed they would not vote to elect a Mormon for president.”

Would those numbers hold up if Mitt ran? I doubt if they’d be anywhere near that bad, but what I don’t doubt is that Mitt Romney’s religion will cost him votes in the general election. Given how close two of the last three elections were, I don’t know if we can afford to throw away a few hundred thousand votes and still win. Fair, not fair, it’s just how it is and however you feel about the Mormon religion (I have some fantastic friends who are Mormons), this is something people should take into consideration before they vote for Romney.

4
  • Anonymous

    Fact: I don’t like the fact he is a proven loser in the past election cycle and do not find him anymore electable this cycle!

  • http://www.cavalierx.com CavalierX

    Romney’s the “well, at least he’s not Obama” candidate. Why so many Conservatives have swallowed the hype that he’s the only candidate that can beat Obama is a mystery to me. In my opinion, he’s more likely to lose to Obama than most of the others.

    • Anonymous

      Sweet buttery Jesus, Seconded!

      This Romney-love from the right is getting very irritating. Were they not there three years ago when Romney’s liberalism was on display in the last Republican primaries?

    • Anonymous

      Can you tell the difference between Obama and Romney?

      I honestly have a hard time seeing differences

      Massive healthcare bills that force people to join and fine them if they don’t:
      Obama – check
      Romney – check

      Enviroweenie shat:
      Obama – check
      Romney – check

      From a very Liberal state:
      Obama – check
      Romney – check

      Pro abortion:
      Obama – check
      Romney – check

      etc…etc…etc…

      If the difference is only going to be the last name why make a change?

      • Average Chuck

        rofl! and I thought Romney was ok.

         http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exZiCVn86HA

        • Anonymous

          Glad I could help you out.

      • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

        I don’t think Romney would push things as far as President Obama but he would push it half way at least.  He’d do less damage with regulations but he’d do enough, for example.

        • Anonymous

          I have never really been a fan of “The better of two evils” and I do understand the differences.

          Look at it this way; right now we are deadlocked – that’s good, nothing is getting “accomplished” in Washington – spending can not go up w/out Repub approval. This is a good thing. Lets now say Romney wins and we gain / retain control in the House and Senate. 

          What will that give us?

          More spending or less spending?
          More freedoms or less freedoms?
          -I know the two are related-

          Anyway I look at it; I see more spending and less freedoms with Mitt. For he is capable of talking Repubs into some spending/socialist shat and I know that this is true is for he chatted away good enough to end up with the “Republican” nomination.

          Deadlock is great, our founding fathers were very smart.

          • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

            Yeah I agree, and in a way, it seems that a GOP president who won’t do what has to be done will only lead to worse things in 2016 when he’s hurled out of office for not repairing the economy.

          • Anonymous

            My statement in no way is an endorsement for voting Obama, I would never do that. 

            I would vote Libertarian. I’m in Illinois I vote but it doesn’t matter on the  national level.

            What wee need is a strong Conservative running.

          • Anonymous

            Exactly. The Democrats want a $2 trillion deficit and Romney wants $1 trillion. We end up with $1.75 and get accused of killing babies anyways.

            We get an SOB that stands up for a balanced budget and the government doesn’t spend a dime until we get one.

    • Anonymous

      Democrats would likewise prefer a different Republican candidate for president, any one of them.

      • Anonymous

        Where did ShyDog go?

        Did he get lost on the way back from the Dr. office yesterday?

      • http://www.patriotpost.com bthewolf

        Really because any other Rep will  end up the winner!

  • Anonymous

    My biggest problem with Romney is that he’s been running for President for five years and nobody has any idea what he stands for. He has no signature program, no clear policy agenda, and has been largely unwilling to step up and either criticize liberals or lead conservatives.

    It may have been politically savvy to hang back and let Palin absorb the hate and rage of the left, but she also built a strong personal brand and identity in the process. Romney is still just that guy with nice hair from Massachusetts.

    Say what you want about Cain and 9-9-9, but he has a plan and he’s on the offensive, and that’s why he’s surging in the polls. Romney sat on his cash and early poll numbers and seems to have gotten too complacent.

    • Anonymous

      He will not criticize liberals – for he is one.
      He will not lead conservatives – for he is not one.

  • Anonymous

    Romney is not a Republican!
    Romney is not a Conservative!
    Mitt Romney has done tremendous damage to the people in the state of MA; implementing Romneycare and forcing them to pay much more for electricity due to Mitt’s war upon CO2.The effects of Mitt’s CO2 environmental regulation had upon electricity prices in Massachusetts can be seen in the attached chart

    Data source:
    http://205.254.135.24/electricity/data.cfm#sales

    Romney’s CO2 regulation press release: http://www.scribd.com/doc/6788…
    He should not get the nomination – we can find an actual Conservative.

    • Anonymous

      Keep saying it over and over.

      • Anonymous

        You should be happy Mitt is running as a Republican for he is a Socialist.

  • Anonymous

    The guy is a loser.  Probably never read the constitution, and that is where they all need to begin.

  • Martin Hale

    I call him, Mirror-man.  He reflects back to each group he addresses what he perceives their beliefs and biases are.  He may have positions and beliefs of his own, but they’re all hidden behind his slick reflective public image.

    • Anonymous

      The last Presidential candidate who tried that was John Kerry. Granted, Romney’s a little better at it than Kerry was, but I don’t think he’ll be any more successful at the ballot box.

      • Anonymous

        Looking back you have to admit Kerry ran a pretty piss-poor campaign.

        There’s a lesson in there for the GOP. Whoever the nominee is has to run on something more than just not being Obama.

        • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

          Exactly, they have to show they’d be better and someone that people should want to vote for, not just an alternative.

  • Anonymous

    Then who can win?  Why don’t we have any better candidates.  I am still angry with Mitch Daniels for not running, but realistically, the media would have skewered him so that was a pipe dream.

    Pawlenty should have stayed in, but then if he wasn’t ready to fight for the job, than we couldn’t have beaten Obama either. 

    I can’t stand the idea of a Romney candidacy.  In my view he is the 3rd party candidate only he willl have an R after his name. 

    How did we end up with so many weak leaders, and if Mitt isn’t the answer than who is?

    • Anonymous

      Look at the polls. Just about every Republican is beating Obama.

      Ironically, I think Pawlenty would have gotten stronger after Perry entered the race, but as you say, if he didn’t even stick it out until now he really had no desire to run.

      I’m sick of the defeatism too. Look at the 2010 election map! Look that NYC just sent a Republican to Congress. Look at the Democrat base, the state of the liberal media, and Obama himself. There’s no reason to fear any of that.

      • http://www.vega.com Vega – Proud Liberal from NYC

        It’s not that Obama is that difficult to beat, it’s that you have less-than-stellar candidates. Someone else should enter before the deadline.

        • Anonymous

          George W. Bush beat sitting VP Al Gore during 4% unemployment.

          It would take a lot to convince me that Obama could beat a hobo off the streets running as a Republican next year.

          • Anonymous

            We stand better odds of ending up with a Republican  via nominating a random hobo from the streets than we do with nominating Romney.

            –It’s a probability thingy–

          • Anonymous

            McCain kissed Bush and he lost. McCain selected Palin as VP candidate and he lost. McCain lost because people were becoming aware of the disaster Bush made of our economy. We the opposition can only hope that Bush will address the RNC convention in a major speech. 

          • Anonymous

            So, the Dems’ strategy is to once again run against Booooossshhh!!!11!!!1!  Brilliant.

            Have an Evil day

          • http://www.cavalierx.com CavalierX

            Not a single one of the people you mentioned is running in this election, in case you didn’t notice.

        • TheDarkKnight

          Interesting…

          Look at the polls. Just about every Republican is beating Obama

          —plus—

          It’s not that Obama is that difficult to beat, it’s that you have less-than-stellar candidates.

          … tells me what many of us have been saying all along.

          The people of this country are begging for someone with balls and a spine to step up to the plate with a clear, coherent and achievable message / vision.

          Do that and 2012 is a cake walk.

          Oh, and Vega, I sincerely doubt you would ever cast a vote for someone without a “D” after their name…

          • Anonymous

            What poll might that be?

          • TheDarkKnight

            Do your own research if you’re curious… there are plenty of them out there.

          • http://www.vega.com Vega – Proud Liberal from NYC

            I don’t know about your polls as in specific Reps vs. Obama. I believe in head-to-head match-ups Obama beats all Rep nominees.

            What you are lacking is a strong Republican, period. I think the real good Rep candidates are sitting out until 2016.

        • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

          Obama is even less than less than stellar.  Any of these guys can beat him as it stands right now, comfortably.

    • http://www.cavalierx.com CavalierX

      “Then who can win?”
       
      Just about anyone running against Obama can win. That’s not the right question. You should be asking “who do we WANT to win?” For me, Romney is not the answer that springs to mind. I’d prefer Perry to Romney, and Bachmann to Perry. I like Cain a lot, but his 9-9-9 plan has a huge flaw: a new national sales tax that Congress will never eliminate. If he could somehow drop that and go straight for a flat or fair tax, he’d be top of my personal list.

      • Anonymous

        Well I like Perry as well.  I am not sure that he can recover, but I certainly hope so. 

      • Martin Hale

        Cav, I have similar thoughts about Mr. Cain to yours – I like his overall approach and outlook, but the 9-9-9 plan is simplistic and has flaws.  But then again, I also think such a plan has absolutely no chance of ever being adopted in such a simplistic form – we all have to remember that it’s Congress which would have to enact it and based on the past 50 years of political observation, it’s safe to say that it will never happen. 

        In all honesty, I think he and his advisory team understand that as well.  In that regard, I see it as just a talisman – a gimmick his advisers are striving to use to get him the nomination.

        • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

          9-9-9 might be simplistic but replacing the entire tax code with that is preferable to the present system.

          The thing is.. he’s running for president not king of congress so what he’d push for bills is really meaningless. I want to know what these guys want to do AS PRESIDENT.

          • Martin Hale

            I agree with you point that a person’s style of governance and their philosophy/values are a lot more important than their specific proposals.

            As far as 9-9-9 goes, the simplistic remark was mostly a critique that, in my lowly opinion, Mr. Cain should mention spending reductions every time he mentions his tax plan.  Just changing our tax structure isn’t going to solve our problems.  While we need to make our revenue more of a shared sacrifice, we also need to get control over our spending.  And for a time, we need to live a lot more austerely while we pay down debt.

            I know Mr. Cain believes in spending cuts – he has talked about them.  But I’d like to hear that he understands that it’s the combination of tax changes and spending cuts which he needs to be promoting as a package deal.

          • Martin Hale

            I agree with you point that a person’s style of governance and their philosophy/values are a lot more important than their specific proposals.

            As far as 9-9-9 goes, the simplistic remark was mostly a critique that, in my lowly opinion, Mr. Cain should mention spending reductions every time he mentions his tax plan.  Just changing our tax structure isn’t going to solve our problems.  While we need to make our revenue more of a shared sacrifice, we also need to get control over our spending.  And for a time, we need to live a lot more austerely while we pay down debt.

            I know Mr. Cain believes in spending cuts – he has talked about them.  But I’d like to hear that he understands that it’s the combination of tax changes and spending cuts which he needs to be promoting as a package deal.

      • Anonymous

        Then by all means let it be Bachman. Jesus will return to the White House, just as it did under Bush II. And it doesn’t matter if she isn’t sincerely religious. If Bush II could get away with a faux religious persona, so can Bachman.

        • TheDarkKnight

          Your faux intelligence is failing you.

    • Anonymous

      It will all depend on whether a preponderance of extremists are sent to the Republican convention. If the moderates outnumber them, Romney is in. If not, then just wait until 2016.

      • http://www.patriotpost.com bthewolf

        The extremists are the ones who claim to be moderates. But then facts aren’t your forte.

  • http://www.pixoneo.com Agence Web

    I still not believe in Obama…

  • Anonymous

    I will not vote for Romney even if he gets the nod.
    If he is the example of the Republican party then count me out for good!

    “Good riddance” you say – Nothing but a middle finger sticking up for you from my end.

  • Bill Dalasio

    I’ve said it before, but it bears repeating.  If Mitt Romney is the Republican nominee, I’m voting for the Libertarian.  Now, I’m from New York.  So, it really doesn’t matter.  But even if I were in a swing state, I’d have to say the same thing.  Whether I vote for him or not, Romney is not going to beat Obama.  Right now, he’s able to beat Obama in polls because he’s the Republican with name recognition.  But, when the rubber hits the road, Romney simply doesn’t fundamentally disagree with Obama on the issues on much more than whether the failed policies should be implemented by a guy with an R after his name or a D.  As the vote gets closer and closer, that’s going to become all too clear. 
    The Republican leadership needs to wake the hell up.  They were able to win a historic landslide in the 2010 Congressional races by running a clear, simple message:  we need to return to smaller, limited government and let the free market recover.  You would think, even if they don’t have a principle amongst them, that sheer political pandering would get them to go with a proven winner.  Instead, they rally behind a moderate who’s spent the last two and half years undermining every other conservative or Republican to leave himself the last man standing?

    • Anonymous

      Well said and exactly my feelings.

  • http://twitter.com/RBMiller82 RB Miller

    It was the case that Romney was effectively dead as a national politician – the second that ObamaCare passed. That was DOA baggage.

    But the Establishment of the GOP insists on shoving this guy down the throats of Conservatives.  Do the Establishment Republicans remember what happened when Obama forced his ObamaCare down our throats?

    Look at the last midterm elections for a hint.

    Shoving this guy on us is the ultimate in arrogance and the rewards may be another 4 year term for Obama. It is not a good idea to trifle with the Tea Party.

    econus.blogspot.com

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