This edition of The Inlander comes out two days after the second debate; I write this before that debate, hoping that President Obama showed up, and that Governor Romney was confronted. The public deserves to have him specify his plans.
Specifically, Mitt Romney’s campaign rests on three big claims he likes to talk about: 1. He knows how to create jobs after all, he’s a successful businessman. 2. He “saved” the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics,” so he can “save” America. 3. He was a successful governor in a heavily Democratic state, and unlike Obama he made bipartisan politics work.
But there are two more big ones that he doesn’t talk about much. First, he passed a popular comprehensive health care law complete with a government mandate almost exactly the law of land known as Obamacare that he routinely derides. He was for it before he was against it.
And as for national security/foreign policy, he keeps it vague, but it’s quite instructive to see who he asks for advice. Romney has surrounded himself with the very same Bush/Cheney retread neo-cons who got us into the trouble we’re in today. He has adopted their trademark sabre-rattling approach to foreign affairs and proposes a 20 percent increase in defense spending while dismissing as a sign of “weakness” Obama’s wise reliance on diplomacy.
In addition to these positions, he has lately reconfirmed that he is staunchly “pro-life” i.e., he does intend to go after Planned Parenthood and opposes abortion except, as the script du jour now reads, in cases of rape or incest.
Of course, when Romney ran for Senate in 1994, he said at one debate, “I believe that since Roe vs. Wade has been the law for 20 years that we should sustain and support it ”
His opponent, Ted Kennedy, shot back: “I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice.”
Let’s take them one at a time, first his successful businessman claim. As his partners at Bain Capital have made clear, mergers and acquisitions, Romney style, had nothing to do with job creation and everything to do with making money for high-roller investors. About half of the merged companies didn’t survive, yet every deal made money for Bain and Romney. Newt Gingrich called it “vulture capitalism.”
Which leads to the next question: What did Mitt do with the mega-millions he made? If most went into offshore investments, so much for his trickle-down, America-first claims. So-called “job creators” are more likely to stow their tax breaks overseas as they are to add jobs to the American economy. But we don’t know for sure because he refuses to release tax returns from those halcyon years the years that would actually shed light on his claims.
As for “saving” the Olympics, the truth is he took a paid (yes, paid) leave of absence from Bain to figure out how to spend the federal largess coming Utah’s way twice the amount that the far larger summer Olympics at Atlanta received. The money came courtesy of the work of the likes of Orrin Hatch and Bob Bennett you know, the Utah politician who the Tea Party jettisoned because he was so good at getting federal largess.
As for his success in Massachusetts, well, it was no miracle. Romney, like most governors, faced a deficit problem, and he tackled it through austerity and a long list of nickel-and-dime user taxes. As a result, Massachusetts’ job creation tanked. Mitt wasn’t a “job creator” as governor, he was the “no-job” creator Massachusetts ranked 47th in the country for new jobs.
And along the way, Romney vetoed some 800 bills almost all overturned. So much for bipartisan leadership. Ever wonder why he didn’t run again if he was succeeding so wildly? He left office with a 34 percent approval rating.
As for foreign policy, the Obama administration has, in four years, successfully repaired the damage to our alliances caused by the Bush/Cheney administration. America’s future will depend on just what the Obama administration is doing more reliance on diplomacy and coalition building, not the military invasions Bush/Cheney preferred.
Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently said bombing nuclear sites in Iran would set back American interests in the region for decades. As for Romney’s plans to increase defense spending by 20 percent: Even with the recent defense cuts, America’s defense budget is greater than all defense budgets worldwide, combined.
Finally, about his pro-life stance. Does he agree with Congressman Todd Akin about “legitimate” rape? He doesn’t say. Does he support Paul Ryan’s “personhood” amendment proposal to give day-old fertilized eggs the same 14th Amendment protection that the Supreme Court invented for corporations? He doesn’t say.
One thing is certain: If Romney is elected, women’s private lives will become a political battleground. Think Supreme Court nominations. Over the next four years, certainly one, maybe two new justices will be appointed. If that’s by Mitt Romney, say goodbye to Roe v. Wade.
Romney has been on every side of every issue. My guess is he doesn’t even understand the problem. After all, in his world you don’t “flip-flop,” you just acquire new product lines and hope the marketing department does its job.

This article fits right in with the "kill Romney" strategy, implying that Romney´s business success was somehow improper, that he may have improperly moved money off shore, and that he does not deserve credit for his efforts in the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics. At no time has Mr. Herold given President Obama comparable treatment. For example, he has not taken the President to task for increasing the deficit by four trillion dollars despite promising to reducce it, failing to balance the budget as he promised, reneging on his promise not to hire lobbyists to work in his administration, and failing to reduce unemployment as he promised.
Mr. Herold began this column with an argumentative question which presupposes that Mr. Romney is unprincipled. One argumentative question deserves another. Has Mr. Herold always been a disingenuous hack, or did he become one over time? Has he always lacked journalistic integrity, or did he abandon it when he began to write for The Inlander? Oct 18, 2012 | Reply to this comment
In the interest of balance, here is my equally biased reply:
Romney most certainly has "Core Values"......They are blatantly obvious if you´ll just observe.
He is devoted:
First of all to his wife and children. Secondly to charity giving more annually than the current president and Vice President many times over. Thirdly he is devoted to excellence. He has the checkbook to prove his business acumen. Further, the fact he graduated from Harvard with his law and business degrees (earned simultaneously) verifies commitment to goal-driven accomplishment.
Lastly, Romney is devoted to America, but not the cess-pool of anti-capitalist, hate-USA-mongers who applaud the insidious and growing reach of epidemic entitlement which ultimately produces servitude instead of providing opportunity for human growth and empowerment.
Oct 19, 2012 | Reply to this comment
Sorry Bob. I don´t know what happened to you.... Oct 19, 2012 | Reply to this comment
The folks in NW Washington need to get a life! Most of the folks are middle class to lower class are they forgetting his comments at a private dinner just a few months ago??? He doesn´t care about you. Why do you care about him?? Just because he is Republican?? Think people! George Bush another Republican put us in this mess after 8 years of his leadership. It´s going to take at least 8 years to pull us out. No President could have pulled us out in only 4 years. Romney will put us in a tail spin we will never recover from.
Robert, your only mistake is preaching the truth to a Republican Choir! Thanks for speaking the truth!! Oct 25, 2012 | Reply to this comment
As for charity, giving to the Mormon church is not charity, that is giving to your cult/religion/mythology you believe in. You have a vested interest in that, charity is the National Forest Foundation, PETA, MS foundation, things like that. So ENOUGH ALREADY with his "charitable" nature. Give to Goodwill if you want a pat on the back. Giving money to your cult so they can run around to poor nations and the disillusioned and feed them while you hand them a book is not charity, if you didn´t give the book, than it would be. What you are doing is selling a product.
As for Bain, when you buy a company and the company fails, people lose their jobs and pensions, and you STILL come out smelling like roses, you are a P.O.S. and you CANNOT brag about how you are a job creator. If you think Romney´s Bain experience is a positive thing, and he is elected president, get ready for higher prices on utilities as they will be privatized, public workers will be laid off, and the wages paid for their positions in the private sector will be far less. If you think that is a good direction for this country, my your god help you. Oct 26, 2012 | Reply to this comment