Opening Safari this morning, I noticed that my homepage,
nytimes.com, displayed an intriguing headline: "The
Mitt Romney Who Might Have Been"
Huh?
He’s the Republican presidential candidate and a former
governor. He is already a very well known and publicized figure. As such, most
if not all Americans around or above voting age know his name. What else could
he have been? Curious, I shoved my current homework aside, clicked on the link
and began to read.
In a two-second summary of the article, author Robert Draper
evaluated Romney’s role as an informal McCain advisor during the 2008 race and
his performance as Massachusetts governor. The point? Romney aimed to please.
I highly recommend reading it if you wish to see a preview of President Romney.
Rather than remain steadfast to his promises or convictions,
Romney preferred to go along and do what would win him support and favor. A
perfect example of this is his revelation about Roe vs. Wade. Once the
potential of a presidential campaign emerged mid-way through his term as
governor, his position on a woman’s right to choose reversed from support to
opposition. His loyalty never lay with Massachusetts. One of his environmental
officials told the Times, “Clearly,
in retrospect, he was weighing what was right for Massachusetts with how it
would play nationally." (nytimes.com)
Melanie's Law, a law targeted at getting more drunk drivers caught repeatedly off the road, is seen as one of the big success stories of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor. While it has been successful at getting repeat offenders off the road, seeing as it was introduced as a result of the tragic death of a young girl by a repeat offender drunk driver, there was little political resistance to its enactment. IID stands for ignition interlock device: you must blow into it and pass or else the car will not start.
photo credit: http://www.mass.gov/rmv/rmvnews/2008/iid_removals.gif
Now imagine a president weighting what was right
for the United States with how it would play on the international stage. Not good.
I do acknowledge that the Times tends to lean toward the left and therefore this evaluation
of Romney is somewhat biased. However, as a Massachusetts resident,
much of its criticisms about his performance ring true. Who wants a governor
who spends the last two years of his term away forwarding his own presidential
campaign? Should he get elected, will he spend the latter years of his term
focused on his re-election campaign instead of our nation’s current crises? I
want my president here and actively engaged in the needs of the United States. I
want him to take a decisive stand on issues and not allow his hopes for
re-election to taint his decisions. He must preside in the present: not in the
prospects of the 2016 race.
Funny how he approved a similar health care system in Massachusetts that took effect while he was governor that is viewed as one of his other big successes and he now rejects such a system on a nation-wide scale. You no longer hear Bostonians complaining about the state-wide health insurance requirement. Massachusetts also has some of the best health statistics in the nation.
Photo credit: http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-TO311_0628sc_G_20120628120827.jpg
Obviously the 2012 presidential election is a huge
determinant in the future of my tax dollars over the course of the next four
years. I make no secret about the fact that I am a liberal: I favor big
government, I support a woman’s right to choose and I applaud universal health
care. But in some ways, I view myself as a fiscal conservative. I dislike when
my hard-earned tax dollars are wastefully and ineffectively spent. I especially
grapple with the concept of welfare systems. My philosophy is simple: live
within your means. If you fail to do so, then that is your financial problem,
not mine and certainly not my tax dollars’.
That being said, obviously I will not vote for Romney. But in addition to our ideological
differences, I do not trust him to be responsible with my tax dollars because he
flip-flopped so many times on issues and policies as governor. If elected president,
which Romney are we actually going to get?
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