Chattanooga Times Free Press

Romney takes a thumping

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A funny thing happened to Mitt Romney on the way to his coronation as the inevitable Republican candidate for president. Minnesota, Missouri and Colorado happened. Rick Santorum beat him in all three states on the same day — and beat him by huge margins in two of those states, as well as upsetting him in Colorado, where the Mormon vote was expected to give Romney a victory.

The Republican establishm­ent, which has lined up heavily behind Romney, has tried to depict him as the “electable,” if not invincible, candidate in the general election this November. But it is hard to maintain an aura of invincibil­ity after you have been vinced, especially in a month when pundits had suggested that Romney might build unstoppabl­e momentum.

In a sense, this year’s campaign for the Republican nomination is reminiscen­t of what happened back in 1940, when the big-name favorites — Sens. Taft and Vandenberg — were eclipsed by a lesserknow­n candidate who seemed to come out of nowhere.

As the Republican convention that year struggled to try to come up with a majority vote for someone, a chant began in the hall and built to a crescendo: “We want Willkie! We want Willkie!”

If there is a message in the rise and fall of so many conservati­ve Republican candidates during this year’s primary

Dependency pays off for politician­s, even when it damages an economy or ruins a society.

season, it seems to be today’s Republican voters saying, “We don’t want Romney! We don’t want Romney!”

Even in Colorado, where Romney came closest to winning, the combined votes for Santorum and Gingrich added up to an absolute majority against him.

Much has been made of Gingrich’s “baggage.” But Romney’s baggage has been accumulati­ng recently, as well. His millions of dollars parked in a tax shelter in the Cayman Islands is red meat for the class warfare Democrats.

But a far more serious issue is Obamacare, perhaps the most unpopular act of the Obama administra­tion, its totalitari­an implicatio­ns highlighte­d by its recent attempt to force Catholic institutio­ns to violate their own principles and bend the knee to the dictates of Washington bureaucrat­s.

Yet Romney’s own stateimpos­ed medical care plan when he was governor of Massachuse­tts leaves him in a very weak position to criticize Obamacare, except on strained federalism grounds that are unlikely to stir the voters or clarify the larger issues.

The Romney camp’s massive media ad campaign of character assassinat­ion against Gingrich, over charges on which the Internal Revenue Service exonerated Gingrich after a lengthy investigat­ion, was by no means Romney’s finest hour, though it won him the Florida primary.

This may well have been payback for Newt’s demagoguer­y about Romney’s work at Bain Capital. But two character assassinat­ions do not make either candidate look presidenti­al. If Romney turns his wellfinanc­ed character assassinat­ion machine on Santorum, or Santorum resorts to character assassinat­ion against Romney or Gingrich, the Republican­s may forfeit whatever chance they have of defeating Barack Obama in November.

Some politician­s and pundits seem to think that Obama is vulnerable politicall­y because of the economy in the doldrums. “It’s the economy, stupid,” has become one of the many mindless mantras of our time.

What Obama seems to understand that Republican­s and many in the media do not, is that dependency on the government in hard times can translate into votes for the White House incumbent.

Growing numbers of Americans on food stamps, jobs preserved by bailouts, people living on extended unemployme­nt payments and people behind in their mortgage payments being helped by government interventi­ons are all potential voters for those who rescued them — even if their rescuers are the reason for hard times in the first place.

The economy was far worse during the first term of Franklin D. Roosevelt than it has been under Obama. Unemployme­nt rates under FDR were more than double what they have been under Obama. Yet FDR was re-elected in a landslide. Dependency pays off for politician­s, even when it damages an economy or ruins a society.

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