‘Weekly Standard’ Magazine Debunks the Myth that Romney is a “Moderate” – Romney is “More Conservative Than You Think”

There is a lot of talk these days about how Mitt Romney is a so-called “Massachusetts moderate” and how other candidates are trying to be the “conservative alternative” to Gov. Romney. Some even compare Mitt Romney to John McCain’s candidacy of 2008.

One very conservative and influential magazine called ‘The Weekly Standard,’ whose editor (Bill Krystol) is a regular panelist on Fox News Sunday, looked into the issue. The conclusion that they found is that Romney is “no moderate,” in fact:

“Romney is at least as conservative as his GOP rivals on jettisoning Obamacare and more conservative than some on entitlements, national security, and immigration. He’s no match for Gingrich on taxes, but that’s about it. Overall, he’s to the right of Gingrich.”

The article goes on to say that in regard to the top four most pressing issues of the day (namely Immigration, Tax Reform, Health Care, and Military Defense spending), Romney is “anything but moderate.”

“On four of the biggest issues in 2012, Romney is anything but moderate—or timid. He gets no special credit for advocating repeal of Obamacare. That’s Republican dogma. But he’s been the most specific among the GOP presidential candidates in backing the Ryan budget in all its parts, including its remake of Medicare. It was House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan’s plan that Gingrich zinged as “right wing social engineering” before reversing himself under duress.

When Romney announced in November his own proposal for cutting spending and reforming Medicare and Social Security, Paul Ryan was thrilled. “Look at what he put out!” he told Jennifer Rubin of the Washington Post. “This is a great development.” Ryan said Romney’s package of spending cuts “tracks perfectly with the House budget,” which Ryan had drafted.”

Further Evidence

Further evidence of Romney’s conservative credentials is the fact that Romney made history in New Hampshire’s vote last week. Not only was he the first non-incumbent Republican to win both Iowa and New Hampshire, but in New Hamphire Romney got more votes from self-identified Republican voters than any other Republican candidate in history. Here is a brief summary on how New Hampshire Republicans voted:

“Mitt picked up 49% of GOP voters. Romney’s 49 percent is the highest mark among self-identified Republicans for any presidential candidate since New Hampshire moved its primary forward in the calendar.

Contrast that with John McCain, with whom he’s often compared as a squishy moderate with problems with Republicans.

McCain is the only candidate since 1980 to win New Hampshire even as he lost among self-identified Republicans.

That means McCain was essentially the worst winner with Republicans in New Hampshire over the past 30 years, while Romney was the best.”

As the Weekly Standard and polls from New Hampshire show, Romney is no moderate. He is a solid conservative. Strikingly, Romney is getting equal support from both conservatives and moderates among the voters and also from among congressmen and Governors who have endorsed Romney. Part of Romney’s strength is that he is a conservative that also appeals strongly to independents. That sounds like the kind of candidate we need running for the White House. 

Here is a video of Former New Hampshire Gov. Sununu speaking of Romney’s “solid, staunch, first-class conservative” support. Watch at the 1:05 mark (but the whole video is pretty entertaining).

Here is a list of some of the notable, “solid, staunch, first-class conservatives” who have endorsed Gov. Mitt Romney. (I give only a partial list because I am sure people would get bored with the very long list of conservative endorsements of Gov. Romney.)

Notable Endorsements:

Gov. Nikki Haley
Gov. Chris Christie
Former VP Dan Quayle
Bob Dole
Ann Coulter
Former Gov. John Sununu
Senator Kelly Ayote
Tea Party organizations in NH and Iowa
Evangelical leaders such as Mark DeMoss
Probably the most under-reported story is Romney’s Catholic Support – Five former ambassadors to the Vatican’s Holy See
And many, many more

For a thorough chart comparing the number of endorsements between the candidates, click here.

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3 Responses to ‘Weekly Standard’ Magazine Debunks the Myth that Romney is a “Moderate” – Romney is “More Conservative Than You Think”

  1. Annette says:

    Thanks for writing about the Weekly Standard article.

    Gingrich may have a bolder tax plan, but I think he would have a tough time getting it to pass while we have such a huge deficit. Romney has a well thought out plan for cutting the deficit and reforming medicare. In the mean time he’ll keep the Bush tax cuts in place, lower corporate taxes for businesses and no capital gains taxes for the middle class. But down the road in the second phase of his recovery plan, he will look at a flatter broader tax cut.

    I think Romney has a broad appeal because he stays away from harsh rhetoric, he talks about reaching across the aisle and expresses his concern about the middle class. Some conservatives see that as signs of a moderate. I see it as signs of a leader. As long as Romney stays on the side of capitalism, the rich know that he is in their camp. He doesn’t need to make speeches about how the rich are paying too much. Sean Hannity actually takes it against Romney because he refuses to call Obama a Socialist. Instead Romney refers to him as a far left liberal, but this is not good enough for Hannity or other conservatives.

    If Romney is nominated which it looks like he will be..I think he can beat Obama. Barack Obama is no match for Mitt Romney.

  2. Ben says:

    Thanks for your comments Annette.

  3. Vic Lundquist says:

    A great post Ben! Thanks. Hopefully our readers can get this one out far and wide!