Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nominee Romney

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Mitt Romney’s victory in the Texas primary sews up a Republican presidenti­al nomination that for all practical purposes already was his even a bit before the official departure from the race of key rivals Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum.

His selection as the GOP standardbe­arer in the November general election came only after Republican voters gave careful considerat­ion — and a number of states — to other candidates. Romney always had a campaign financing edge, however, and the fact that Santorum and Gingrich got as far as they did is remarkable considerin­g how significan­t the financial disparity was between them and Romney.

Nonetheles­s, the former Massachuse­tts governor now has more than the 1,144 delegates he needs to claim the nomination, so the focus is fully on the question of how he will beat President Barack Obama in the fall.

Many observers, including this editorial page, have raised concerns that the Obama campaign will use Romney’s support of an ObamaCare-style health program in Massachuse­tts against the GOP nominee. That tactic already is being employed, and there seems to be little reason to think it will not continue so long as Obama’s advisers believe it is an effective strategy.

There is at least one defense of the Massachuse­tts law, however: It was not unconstitu­tional, as ObamaCare clearly is with its requiremen­t that virtually all Americans buy medical insurance approved by the federal government. Look for anti-Romney campaign ads to ignore that distinctio­n entirely and focus instead on unfortunat­e similariti­es between the Massachuse­tts law and ObamaCare.

Still, Romney has his strengths. He has an extensive and successful background in business, and he famously has not hesitated during his career to trim unproducti­ve staff from the ventures in which he has been involved. That raises hopes that Romney will take a scalpel to the federal budget as well and veto the reckless spending that has helped saddle the United States with nearly $16 trillion in debt. That alone would make a Romney administra­tion worthwhile.

And while Romney is not as dyed-inthe-wool culturally conservati­ve as, say, Santorum, he is leagues ahead of Obama in his thinking on matters such as the sanctity of human life.

It’s doubtful he will be able to match Obama’s astonishin­g fundraisin­g prowess as the election nears, and that is a disadvanta­ge that cannot be overstated. But even big money has some limits. Obama and his supporters can bombard the American people with campaign ads assuring them that the economy is enjoying a bustling recovery. But if sooner or later that rosy assessment doesn’t start squaring with something resembling reality, all the gushing TV spots in the world won’t keep Obama in the Oval Office.

Unless, of course, Romney has a series of major stumbles. But Romney has grown peppier and more confident in his public appearance­s of late, and he has acquired a good deal of campaign discipline that seems unlikely to let him fall into too many political traps.

Based on his record of failure as president, Obama would seem rather beatable. And he may be. But we’ll know soon enough whether Romney has the strength of message and the right ideas to persuade the voting public to send him to the White House.

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