Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Californians for Romney in 08

California is not a swing state but a “swung” state: It has bestowed its 55 electoral votes on Democrats in every presidential election since 1988. Before ‘88, it elected Republican presidents six straight times.

The Golden State, then, has shifted reliably into the Democratic column, so much so that it’s now taken for granted by the Party of Jackson.

Therein lies a glimmer of opportunity for the GOP, though. If a Republican candidate could land California, or even come close, he could wreak havoc at the DNC. This horrific prospect has provided dramatic fodder for The West Wing’s current season, where a (moderate) Republican senator from California is the favorite to capture his home state and with it the presidency.

Could life imitate art? Possibly, if Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney has anything to say about it. Romney recently paid a visit to the Golden State to participate in the meeting of the Republican Governors’ Association, of which he was named chairman.

I heard him speak at a meeting of the Fairbanks Republican Women Federated (FRWF), one of the most successful groups of its kind. His movie-star-handsome looks render him instantly appealing, at least superficially, in a state like California.

But Romney’s potential appeal to residents of our most populous state runs deeper than appearances. Although he is increasingly socially conservative, Romney’s background and governing style — not to mention the fawning profiles that have graced the pages of both liberal and conservative magazines — suggest he might command support in California.

For one thing, the Massachusetts governor is a minority in more ways than one. As a Mormon and as a Republican in a Democratic state, he can relate to feelings of alienation from the mainstream, an ability that will promote at least a perception of his tolerance and openness — both musts in California. Perceptions matter — again, especially in California — and anything that may undercut a simplistic dismissal of him as Yet Another White Man will help. Perhaps unwittingly, Romney uses phrases like “tiny minority position” to describe his political situation.

Furthermore, his ability to run a state successfully despite the overwhelming political odds stacked against him will stand him well in a state where another Republican governor faces a similar predicament. The Massachusetts legislature is 85-percent Democratic; its entire congressional delegation are Democrats. Romney calls himself “a red speck in a blue state,” which is another way of saying that he’s able to maintain his redness while still working with the blue around him.

And indeed the governor’s experience as chief executive of Massachusetts has been largely successful. He touts practical solutions that he arrived at in conjunction with the legislature, such as reforming the way the homeless are sheltered — namely, scrapping the wasteful hotel program and helping them find long-term residences — and jiggering the educational system to foster progress in math and science (on a 2005 national test, Bay State students ranked first or tied for first in math and most other subjects).

Moreover, while the governor often describes himself as a social conservative (his abortion position — a promise not to violate the state’s “status quo”is a matter of some controversy), he displays a pragmatic side even when it comes to divisive issues like stem-cell research.

He also approaches cultural issues with friendly, hard-to-disagree-with rhetoric. At the FRWF speech, he heaped praise upon David Landes’s “The Wealth and Poverty of Nations,” a magisterial book stressing the importance of cultural norms to economic development. He quoted Abigail Adams’s observation that “great necessities call out great virtues.” And he urged the crowd, in his own words, to “live by principles higher than ourselves.” Culture, virtue, principles — these phrases may be anathema to the California Left but, when presented with Romney’s thousand-watt smile, can easily be swallowed by the vast middle.

Romney’s experience as a chief executive in real life presents another appealing aspect to his persona. As the founder of Bain Capital and a successful businessman of his own making, he would be an apt replacement for the first “MBA president.”

And, finally, Romney’s career offers an X-factor of which no other Republican in the field can boast. As detailed in an eloquent introduction by Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle (incidentally, the first-ever female, Jewish, Republican, and non-Oahuan governor of the Aloha State), Romney fished out the 2002 Salt Lake Olympic Games from a filthy cesspool of corruption. He swooped in, cleaned house, and prepared a successful Games while avoiding the long shadow cast by both the Salt Lake shenanigans and 9/11.

With some conservatives worried about serious Republican electoral trouble because of a growing number of bribery, money laundering, illegal lobbying, and obstruction of justice scandals embroiling many key figures in the GOP (in California, it’s not just the Republicans enduring such problems), Romney’s D.C.-free whistle-clean image, coupled with his proven ability to transcend a corrupt mess, may prove a tempting antidote. Hopefully the pundits are wrong and the scandals will have little impact in 2006. But if they do, Mitt will be waiting in the wings.

In the end, could Romney, who hasn’t yet stated whether he’ll run for president, return the Golden State to the GOP? Well, to be honest, probably not. But he may well represent the Republicans’ best shot.

Michael M. Rosen is an attorney in San Diego and heads the Republican Jewish Coalition’s San Diego chapter. The views expressed are his own.

Written by Ann Marie Curling

You Decide--Romney in 08

Mitt Romney’s resounding win in Michigan throws the Republican race wide open heading into Saturday’s South Carolina primary — the first test in the South — and the marathon of primaries and caucuses Feb. 5.

The same holds true on the Democratic side, where the top three candidates — Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards — squared off in Nevada for a debate Tuesday night to hash out differences over energy and the economy in the runup to that state’s Saturday caucuses.

With three Republican candidates now carrying major wins under their belts, most of the GOP field shifted gears to South Carolina before the final votes in Michigan’s primary were cast, sparing little time for recovery as they tried to gain momentum going into Super Tuesday Feb. 5, when 24 states hold primaries and caucuses for Democrats, and 21 are voting in Republican races.

With the robust GOP field refusing to thin, four candidates are effectively scrambling for an edge in the Palmetto State. And each is measuring his confidence differently.

Leery to hype expectations too precipitously following his Michigan victory, Romney told FOX News on Wednesday that he can stomach a loss in South Carolina, even to his chief Michigan rival John McCain. Nonetheless, he has re-launched a series of television ads there after pulling them to focus on Michigan.

In a race with no front-runner, Romney cast the state matches as a series of incremental popularity boosts.

“I think Senator McCain is expected to win South Carolina pretty handily so that will give him a nice little boost,” Romney said. “Then I am hoping to do well in Nevada, maybe win there. That will give me another boost. Then off to Florida and who knows what the heck will happen in Florida.”

An American Research Group poll of Nevada GOP voters taken from Jan. 9-14 shows Romney leading the pack there with 28 percent. McCain was second with 21 percent.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee was less modest in his predictions. The winner of the Iowa caucuses, who came in third in Michigan and is second only to Romney in the convention delegate count, said he’s proud of his Michigan performance but he’s a shoo-in for South Carolina.

“Here is what is going to happen. We are going to get to South Carolina … We are going to win Saturday, and it’s going to be a big night for us,” he said. The Southern Baptist pastor stopped short of calling it a must-win, but repeated he will take the state because of his closely held social conservative tenets.

“The people here are looking for somebody who I think recognizes that I represent what they stand for, which is a pro-life, pro-family, pro-Second Amendment, lower taxes, actual running of government,” he said.

McCain predicted he too would prevail in South Carolina, the state that derailed his candidacy eight years ago.

Out of Michigan before the polls closed, McCain told South Carolina supporters: “For a minute there in New Hampshire, I thought this campaign might be getting easier. But you know what? We’ve gotten pretty good at doing things the hard way, too. I think we’ve shown them we don’t mind a fight.”

Polls still show McCain, whose once crumbling campaign rebounded to grab New Hampshire Jan. 8, leading in the state.

South Carolina poll averages from RealClearPolitics.com show McCain with 25.8 percent, Huckabee with 23.3 percent, Romney with 15.3 percent and former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson with 10.5 percent.

Thompson, who has yet to win a contest, has said he’s drawing a “line in the sand” in South Carolina.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Texas Rep. Ron Paul are trailing in the single digits in the state.

Giuliani, though, has avoided the state and has staked his campaign on his showing in Florida, which votes Jan. 29, hoping a win there will keep him fresh in voters’ minds come Feb. 5.

Among the Democrats, Clinton, Obama and Edwards all squared off for a debate in Las Vegas Tuesday, and all scheduled Nevada events for Wednesday.

Clinton and Obama sought to defuse tension over race at the debate, following comments by Clinton highlighting President Lyndon Johnson’s role in the civil rights struggle that some say minimized grassroots efforts by Martin Luther King Jr.

On Tuesday Obama and Clinton pledged to put the matter behind them.

Clinton won New Hampshire and Obama won Iowa, so each is trying to jockey for position in the upcoming states, while Edwards is still looking for his first win. Clinton also won Michigan, but she was the only major candidate on the ballot. Candidates did not campaign there because the state was stripped of its delegates to the national convention for holding an early primary.

Democratic candidates are stressing economic plans in Nevada and appealing to its large Hispanic population and its union contingent.

Clinton’s got a new ad out in Nevada in which she says she’ll be a voice for the millions of people suffering a troubled economy.

Obama began running two new ads in Nevada Wednesday focusing on his campaign vision of change – through expanding health care, ending the Iraq war and curbing the influence of lobbyists. He also announced the launch of two Spanish-language ads in the state the day before.

The Illinois senator, who has already been endorsed by the powerful Culinary Workers Union in Nevada, was endorsed Wednesday by the Las Vegas Review Journal.

Unlike South Carolina — where polls show Obama leading Clinton and Edwards far behind despite his efforts to revive his campaign in the state — recent Nevada polls show the race more competitive there. The American Research Group poll from Jan. 9-14 showed Clinton with 35 percent, Obama with 32 percent and Edwards with 25 percent.

The South Carolina Democratic primary is Jan. 26.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.