J-Walking

The Intractable Romney Problem

Thursday May 31, 2007

Today in New Hampshire, Gov. Romney heard this from a restaurant patron:

"I'm one person who will not vote for a Mormon," Al Michaud of Dover shouted at Romney when the former Massachusetts governor approached him inside Harvey's Bakery. Romney was kicking off the second of two day's worth of campaign visits in the lead primary state.

...Michaud later told reporters he was not "a right-winger," alluding to some evangelical Christians who have compared Romney's faith to a cult. Instead, Michaud stated he was "a liberal."

If Gov. Romney ends up running against Sen. Clinton it will be fascinating to see what happens. My guess? More people are scared of a Mormon in the White House than a woman. Perhaps this is what happens when we've had candidates and interest groups suggesting that there is, in fact, a religious test for office - namely that only conservative Christians should be elected.

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Comments
Ross
June 1, 2007 8:01 PM
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Who is it who's saying only conservative Christians should be elected?
I haven't heard anyone who is scared of a Mormon being elected president, but maybe I just hang out with tolerant people or maybe they don't say it out loud. I don't know.

canucklehead
June 1, 2007 8:29 PM
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Hi Stephen, Would you please tell us: what are your particular complaints with the way MA is now? PatientWitness | 06.01.07 - 12:20 pm
Ditto. As a Canadian I keep seeing references on various U.S. blogs suggesting that Mass is Sodom/Gomorrah incarnate. Why? Uphere we see it as the home of the AL East leading BoSox!

Unsympathetic reader
June 2, 2007 4:17 PM
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Stephen Davidson asks about where Massachusetts is now. Hmm... Well Massachusetts has a *black* governor and he is promoting biotech development and realigning two-year colleges with future employment needs. The state has more than its share of high-tier colleges and universities in the nation. I guess I could see how better education and minority legislators would upset some people. Who knows, maybe Patrick will even allow wind farms off the Cape instead of securing behind-the-back veto power for such projects. He's also keeping Springfield's recovery moving along. Housing is still expensive, but that's not a typical indicator of moral decay unless one assumes it was entirely driven by a bunch of gays moving into the area and increasing property values by bringing in better restaurants and improving aesthetics. That could upset some people who don't like good sushi, French restaurants or movie theaters that show films with subtitles. And contrary to society's worst fears, gay marriage hasn't bankrupted the marriages of heterosexuals in the state. It's gone over with a yawn that few really notice. Oh, it's now possible to buy beer on Sundays but not in supermarkets. The odd thing about Romney is not that he's Mormon. Who cares? It's that he's running against his former self and the state he managed. Still, he was better than the former Republican governor, Jane Swift. *That* was a pure disaster.

Unsympathetic reader
June 2, 2007 4:26 PM
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MA also has one of the lowest divorce rates in the nation. If you really want to see Sodom and Gomorrah, try Arkansas or Wyoming instead. Just because places appear quiet doesn't mean nothing is happening. It just means nobody is talking.

K.Bitner
June 4, 2007 2:47 PM
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"If Gov. Romney ends up running against Sen. Clinton it will be fascinating to see what happens. My guess? More people are scared of a Mormon in the White House than a woman." I'd agree that many people would be more scared of a Mormon than a woman, except THAT woman should scare everyone. "Perhaps this is what happens when we've had candidates and interest groups suggesting that there is, in fact, a religious test for office - namely that only conservative Christians should be elected." I've heard this many times, but the ones I hear say it also add the word men to the mix. A religious test is useless, as none of the candidates it going to be honest about what they really believe until they've already been elected. They are politicians, not your average, everyday, honest citizens.

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