Willard "Mitt" Romney
Candidate for the 2008 Republican presidential
nomination
by Liz Olson
Mitt Romney may lack the political experience of his rivals for
the Republican presidential nomination, but his success in business and
managing the 2002 Olympic Games has
demonstrated an innate leadership ability.
Romney’s presidential
campaign agenda is based on conservative principles, including small
government, lower taxes, national security, and defending the traditional
family.
Born into a politically active family in Detroit, Michigan, with roots in the Mormon Church, it
was only natural that Romney would pursue a political career. His father,
George W. Romney, was a 1968 presidential candidate and his mother, Lenore
Romney, was a U.S. Senate candidate in 1970.
Business
Career
Romney graduated with a B.A. from Brigham Young University,
and then earned an M.B.A. and a J.D. from Harvard Business and Law schools.
After graduating from Harvard, Romney began his business career with the
Boston Consulting Group in 1974, and went on to become vice president of
another Boston-based consulting firm, Bain & Company, Inc. In 1984, he
co-founded Bain Capital, a private equity investment firm. He headed the
company for 14 years, investing in or buying well-known companies such as
Staples, Brookstone, Domino’s, and Sports Authority. He and his wife
have accrued a net worth of between $190 and $250 million.
With a
short political résumé, Romney draws on his business
experience and his role on the 2002 Olympic Games committee as proof of his
ability to run the nation. Romney was brought in as the president and CEO of
the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic Games in 1999 to rescue the games from
fiscal crisis. He overhauled the committee’s leadership and policies,
reduced budgets, and increased fundraising. He also coordinated a $300
million security budget to ensure safety at the Games in the wake of the September 11, 2001,
attacks.
Massachusetts Politics
Romney’s political
career has been brief; he served as the governor of Massachusetts for only
one term. In 1994 he lost to Democrat Ted Kennedy in the race for
the U.S. Senate. Kennedy, however, won by the slimmest margin in his nine
terms in the Senate.
Despite a complaint filed by the Democratic Party
about residency issues, Romney ran for governor of Massachusetts in 2002. He used $6.3 million of
his own money during the campaign, and defeated Democrat Shannon
O’Brien in the general election.
As governor, Romney created a
scholarship program that rewards the top 25% of Massachusetts high school
students with a tuition-free education to any Massachusetts public college
or university. He also proposed and signed legislation that requires all
Massachusetts residents to have health care.
Romney’s early
support gave way to criticism over the explosive gay marriage issue in
Massachusetts. He opposes same-sex marriages and civil unions, yet he backed
a proposed state constitutional amendment in 2004 that would have allowed
civil unions and banned gay marriage (the amendment failed to pass). He
withdrew his support of this amendment, however, in favor of a 2005 petition
that banned both. (In 2003, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled
that barring gays and lesbians from marrying violates the state
constitution.)
Campaign for President
After his term as
Massachusetts governor ended in January 2007, Romney formally announced his
candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination. While Romney is
certainly not the first politician from Massachusetts to run for president,
he does break the mold of Massachusetts liberal. Indeed, his campaign is
aimed at the conservative wing of the Republican Party.
Articulate and
polished, Romney seems at ease in front of a crowd. He remains on point and
speaks in full sentences during his speeches. Regardless of his short
political career, Romney’s business acumen is translating into success
in fund-raising, allowing him to be one of the top contenders for the
Republican nomination.
On December 6, 2007, Romney gave a 20-minute speech at the George Bush Presidential Library in Texas to address concerns expressed by many voters about his faith. "I believe in my Mormon faith and endeavor to live by it," said Romney, but he also stressed that his religious views would not affect his ability to be president.
Romney was doing well in early voting states, so it was argued he did not need to give a speech about his religion. However, it has been a sensitive issue since he began running for the Republican nomination, and his support has recently shifted in states like Iowa. Polls have shown that Americans would not vote for a Mormon candidate. According to evangelical Christians, who make up a significant amount of Republican votes, Mormonism is heretical.
Many people compared Romney's speech to one made by John F. Kennedy in 1960 about his Roman Catholic faith. Kennedy was trying to convince ministers, who were openly hostile of his faith, that his religion would not affect his governance. Romney, on the other hand, spoke in front of a friendly crowd.
In his speech, Romney advocated for religion to take a larger role in American public life. Romney stated that "no candidate should become the spokesman for his faith. For if he becomes president he will need the prayers of the people of all faiths."
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