Former
Governor Mitt Romney is on the verge of sweeping this Tuesday's Republican
primary elections. Likely wins in
Wisconsin, Maryland and the District of Columbia will add significantly to his
already commanding delegate lead, and increase pressure on his opponents to
throw their support to the former Massachusetts Governor.
More
leading Republicans are getting on the Romney bandwagon each day in hopes of
ending the divisiveness that has characterized much of the Republican primary
campaign so far. Even after all of
their harsh criticisms, former Senator Rick Santorum and former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich have each said they will support Romney if he ends up getting the
party's nomination. But they both, along with Representative Ron Paul, are
still campaigning to be their party's standard-bearer.
Rick
Santorum shows no signs of easing up.
On Sunday, he compared Romney to Senator John McCain, who lost the 2008
election to President Barack Obama.
"We came up with someone who wasn't able to win," Santorum
said on Fox News Sunday. "We don't need to repeat
that again. We don't need to bail out and not have the best candidate to take
Barack Obama on in the fall."
Santorum has accused Romney of not being a conservative; flip--flopping
on many issues and of being the author of Romneycare, the blue print for the
President's health care reform law.
Santorum insists he will present a stronger contrast in the general
election.
Nonetheless,
establishment Republicans have already turned their attention to who would be
the best running mate for Romney.
Speculation has Florida Senator Marco Rubio as the best choice. A Tea Party favorite, supporters
believe Rubio could improve the Republican's chances among Hispanics. Rubio is of Cuban heritage, but Cubans
make up only a small percentage of the U.S. Hispanic population. More than 60% of that population is
Mexican, and they tend to vote for Democrats.
Another
potential vice presidential candidate is New Jersey Governor Chris
Christie. Christie has campaigned
hard for Romney, and his blunt, in-your-face style frequently outshines the
former governor in joint appearances.
But voters in a presidential election don't vote for a president because
of their running mate. That is up until now.
This
election will rest heavily on Mitt Romney's ability to convince voters he is
more qualified for the job than President Obama. And that he has a better plan to increase employment, lower
gasoline prices and assure America's national security. Yet many of his proposals feel like
déjà vu; the same Republican policies of cutting taxes on the wealthiest
Americans while ending some loopholes, more oil and gas drilling rather than
developing alternatives, and a extremely hard-line foreign policy. Or will he wipe his Etch A Sketch clean
and redo his positions for the general election?
The
fact is Mitt Romney is an opportunist.
That is how he made his money in business. And Mitt Romney is an elitist. He is from the upper tier of the one-per centers. His friends own football teams, they
don’t play for them. He cannot easily connect with regular people; he's a
Mittbot. So he is prone to make
comments that most normal people consider gaffs.
Who
can forget this Romney gem last August from Iowa: "Corporations are
people, my friend… of course they are. Everything corporations earn ultimately
goes to the people. Where do you think it goes? Whose pockets? Whose pockets?
People's pockets. Human beings, my friend." Or this heart-warming comment two months ago, "I like
being able to fire people who provide services to me." And about the same time, "I'm not
concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there."
Several
times over these past few months he has tried very hard to sound like an
Average Joe. “There were a couple
of times I wondered whether I was going to get a pink slip,” he said earlier
this year to some volunteers. Or
his attempt to feel empathy for a group of unemployed, "I should tell my story. I'm also
unemployed." Romney is worth
more than $200 million. And
the truth surfaced when speaking in Michigan in February, "[My wife]
drives a couple of Cadillacs."
Of course, who can forget the $10,000 bet offer to Texas Governor Rick
Perry during a Republican debate in December?
Given
Romney's difficulty in winning over voters from his own party, the lack of
enthusiasm for him among evangelicals, conservatives and members of the Tea
Party, his numerous flip-flops, Romneycare, and his propensity to make gaffs,
he will need all the help he can get to win over the national electorate. Help may come if the economy gets
worse, gas prices continue to rise or if there is some national security
setback for President Obama before the November election.
More
likely, Romney will look to a strong running mate who can fill in the many
shortcomings he has as a candidate.
And that person will become the party's frontrunner in 2016 should
President Obama win reelection in November. Even if a twice beaten Mitt Romney decides to make a third
run at the White House.
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