It is entirely
possible that Mitt Romney will be the next President of the United States . Actually, not only is it possible but given
a possible impending slowdown in the economy and the hundreds of millions that outside
groups will spend on behalf of Mr. Romney the chances are better than 50% that
he will be the next President. Mr. Obama
may be leading in the polls now, but how big a lead will he have after $1
billion of negative attack ads have been aimed at him.
So The Dismal
Political Economist has been trying, really trying to find things to like
about Mr. Romney. Unfortunately Mr.
Romney just makes it so darn hard. His
latest action
is to force the resignation of an openly gay foreign policy adviser that
was hired by the campaign to provide support for Mr. Romney in the foreign
policy area.
Richard Grenell, the
openly gay spokesman recently hired to sharpen the foreign policy message of
Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign, has resigned in the wake of a full-court
press by anti-gay conservatives.
The news was first reported by Washington Post Romney
columnist Jennifer Rubin. No one should mistake this for anything else but a forced resignation, no matter what the spin or the public persona. The campaign
may have used this friendly source to try and perpetuate the myth that the
decision was Mr. Genell’s and that the Romney campaign really wanted him to
stay.
The
Romney camp has now responded via campaign manager Matt Rhoades: “We are
disappointed that Ric decided to resign from the campaign for his own personal
reasons. We wanted him to stay because he had superior qualifications for the
position he was hired to fill.”
but even the rabidly partisan Romney supporter Ms.
Rubin wasn’t buying it.
The so-called voluntary resignation was anything but voluntary, and no one buys the story that the Romney campaign wanted Mr. Grenell to stay but he left of his own volition.
The so-called voluntary resignation was anything but voluntary, and no one buys the story that the Romney campaign wanted Mr. Grenell to stay but he left of his own volition.
According to sources familiar
with the situation, Grenell decided to resign after being kept under wraps
during a time when national security issues, including the president’s ad
concerning Osama bin Laden, had emerged front and center in the campaign.
Pieces in two conservative
publications, the National Review and Daily Caller, reflected the uproar by some social
conservatives over the appointment. [UPDATE, 4:30 p.m.: Although
Grenell also raised the ire of liberal commentators with now-deleted tweets
about certain prominent women, none of the sources I spoke with mentioned the
tweets as a factor in his resignation decision.]
In the
National Review, Matthew J. Franck wrote late last week: “Suppose Barack Obama
comes out — as Grenell wishes he would — in favor of same-sex marriage in his
acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention. How fast and how publicly
will Richard Grenell decamp from Romney to Obama?”
So Mr. Romney jettisons an adviser just as soon as
objections are raised about his private life from his prejudiced base, just like he jettison's position he previously held that are now bothersome to his campaign. How can anyone believe that this man has the character
to be President?
No comments:
Post a Comment