Romney campaign official calls Brownback “bottom feeder”

UPDATE: GOPProgress and Jim Geraghty have now written on this.

Earlier in the week, Mitt Romney released his National Faith and Values Steering Committee. In doing so, he entered a brave new world. Four of the people on the list are bloggers:

- David French, Senior Counsel, Alliance Defense Fund, Tennessee 
- Nancy French, Author, Red State of Mind, Tennessee 
- Justin Hart, Vice President of Communications, Lighted Candle Society

- Jason Bonham, Illinois State Director, Legacy Law Foundation, Illinois 

Nancy and David French write at Evangelicals for Mitt. And Justin and Jason founded and write for My Man Mitt. Now, my question is: will the campaign be held accountable for what these bloggers say? After all, they are now deputized by the campaign itself as spokesmen on "Faith and Values."

Well, Jason Bonham really classed it up today. He called Sam Brownback a "bottom feeding candidate" and posted a picture of a bottom feeding fish. If Jason were a campaign staffer, he would be fired.

So how will the Romney campaign respond? This isn’t quote Amanda Marcotte material. But this is pretty offensive. Presumably, if the Romney campaign has any decency, Jason will be removed and disavowed form the campaign.

Of course, these bloggers have said other deeply offensive things. Let’s see how the Romney experiment goes.

In any case, if this is the kind of "Faith and Values" that the Romney campaign has, I say, "no thanks."

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Brownback whacks Romney again

Mitt Romney: Proud of Taxpayer-Funded Abortions

Signed legislation forcing taxpayers to fund abortions as governor



DES MOINES - Although Mitt Romney signed legislation expanding taxpayer-funded abortions in Massachusetts, his campaign said Thursday that Romney is proud of his actions as governor pertaining to abortion.



As governor, Romney signed "Commonwealth Care" into law, legislation that forced taxpayers to pay for abortions and mandated that a member of the legislation’s policy board be appointed by Planned Parenthood.



Prominent pro-lifers have repeatedly asked Romney to call for the repeal of the legislation, to which Romney has refused.



"It is time, once and for all, for Mitt Romney to publicly support or condemn the legislation he signed expanding taxpayer-funded abortions in Massachusetts," said John Rankin, Iowa communications director of Brownback for President.



Yesterday, ABC News revealed startling new revelations in a story headlined, "Romney’s Pro-Life Conversion: Myth or Reality? After ‘Epiphany’ on Abortion, He Named a Pro-Choice Judge and Supported Stem-Cell Research." Story available at: http://www.abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=3279653&page=1



Rankin added: "John Kennedy once said: ‘The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie — deliberate, contrived and dishonest — but the myth — persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.’ Mitt Romney’s persistence that he was a pro-life governor is truly unrealistic and is certainly a myth."

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Brownback drops hammer on Romney

In light of the Kansas City National Right to Life convention, Sam Brownback has dropped the hammer on Mitt Romney. It is a fun read, but Brownback’s politcal director has a fun line:

“One would think that Mitt Romney is in training for an Olympic gold medal in verbal gymnastics, as his various political contortions on abortion are stunning in their timing and flexibility,” Gillespie added. "The best advice for Mitt Romney comes from Mark Twain: ‘Always tell the truth. That way, you don’t have to remember what you said.’”

Full text, including a great timeline of Romney’s multiple positions on abortion, after the jump
Read More »

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Brownback lays into Romney

Brownback really whacks him:

Mitt Romney is a good man. But there are many differences between us on the issues. I am for a three state political solution in Iraq. He is not. I am pro-life. He is not. I am opposed to gun control. He has not been. I am for a flat tax. He is not

Recall that Romney had actually taken out an ad in 1996 against Forbes’ flat tax proposal.

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The also-raised…

Sam Brownback got $2m. That’s 4x Mike Huckabee. That’s good for him.

John McCain got $12.5m. Not so good… He is expected to have a high burn rate. What’s the COH? Read the statement for a little self-flagellation..

All in all, Mitt Romney won the day.

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Pat Toomey: “Disappointed” except for Brownback

The Club for Growth’s Pat Toomey was interviewed on Fox and Friends and had some explosive things to say about Presidential candidates:

Quotes:

Nobody walked away with it either.

But there’s an opening….

What disappointed me a little bit is that no one came out with a really bold platform … Sam Brownback was the most specific and concrete.

Good for Sam…

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Brownback beats Romney in Hillary head-to-head

Last week Rasmussen released polls on 2008 head-to-head match-ups between various Republicans and various Democrats. The Brownback campaign touted one that showed Brownback only 5% behind Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee. Rasmussen notes:

Brownback is an unknown to 43%, and viewed favorably by only 19%. Just a couple weeks after his announcement, the percentage who view him favorably isn’t any larger even among Republicans.

Remember that Sam Brownback is at 1 or 2% in nationwide polls right now. People do not know who he is. It is likely that he is polling as, approximately, a "generic Republican" against Hillary Clinton. Why does this matter? Contrast this with Mitt Romney’s performance against Hillary Clinton:

  1. Hillary Clinton beats Sam Brownback 46-41.
  2. Hillary Clinton beats Mitt Romney 51-41

Sam Brownback performs 5% better against Hillary Clinton than Mitt Romney. Now, there are two possibilities: either people are favorably inclined towards Brownback, or they are unfavorably inclined against Romney. As much as I love Sam Brownback, I just do not think that it is credible to argue that a significant number of voters have information at this time that would make them more favorable to him than the average Republican. Therefore, I have to conclude that a significant number of voters have negative information about Mitt Romney.

If I am right that Sam Brownback is polling as a "generic Republican", then Mitt Romney is underperforming the generic Republican by 5% against Hillary Clinton. This is believable. Romney has been beaten up in the press, as I have noted repeatedly. At this point, Romney has a couple of strong negatives, including Massachusetts, his religion, and his flip-flops, which have all been written about in the AP and on CNN, etc. This could easily account for the losses that he is facing, as compared to Sam Brownback who just has not received the same kind of press. This is a dire warning for the Romney campaign.

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Club for Growth praises Brownback

The Club for Growth continued its evaluation of 2008 candidates with Sam Brownback, with a mostly positive result. This is important for Brownback because it differentiates him from Mike Huckabee, who the Club has savaged.

I think that this confirms that Brownback is in the 2nd-tier, not the 3rd. He has been building an organization for quite a while, as I have documented. He has solid economic credentials. Furthermore, the evidence is that he is doing better in the polling than Huckabee, as The Plank recently noted.

This is why I would echo Adam’s assessment on Redstate that Huckabee should consider the Senate instead of the White House. Arkansas is just an economically liberal state, and, as Mitt Romney has found, it is very hard to run with a record out of sync with the national party on bedrock issues.

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Southern Baptist leaders weigh in on candidates (update)

Update: Hugh Hewitt responds to the Giuliani bit with an explanation that reminds me of Jonah Goldberg’s thesis.

The Hill interviewed Richard Land, the Chairman of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Convention. He had some interesting comments to make about the leading candidates for President. First, Rudy Giuliani:

Beginning with Giuliani, Land said “the vast majority” of social conservative voters will not vote for the former mayor even if he gets the nomination and faces off against Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.).

Furthermore, a Fox News poll pointed out that 57% of GOP voters do not know that Rudy Giuliani is pro-choice:

The biggest red flag for Rudy has to be that only 42% of Republicans surveyed correctly identified him as pro-choice. Twenty-one percent of Republican voters have it wrong and think Rudy is pro-life, and another 36% of Republicans don’t have a clue what his position on abortion. In other words, nearly six out of ten registered Republican voters have yet to learn something about Rudy which, we can infer from the first question on abortion, will make close to half of them either "somewhat" less likely or "a lot" less likely to vote for him.

Land also claimed that Rudy’s "personal" problems will create a real problem for Rudy, and Newt!

He also thought that John McCain had problems, with the standard list of problems — judges and BCRA:

Though Land doesn’t question McCain’s consistency on abortion issues, he said McCain’s involvement in the “Gang of 14” — the bipartisan Senate group that prevented the “nuclear” option on judicial nominees — and his refusal to support anti-gay marriage proposals severely hurts his chances with traditional-values voters.

In the end, Land said, social conservatives are concerned about the kind of judges a President McCain would nominate.

Voting pro-life is not enough,” Land said. “He has got to express himself in other venues

Perhaps the most interesting was statements on Romney:

“Conservatives would see that as ‘He’s seen the light,’” Land said. “They would see it as less of a flip-flop than as a journey.”

Of Romney’s Mormon religion, Land said it’s not a “deal-killer.

However, the leader of the SBC’s North American Missions Board, which is responsible for evangelizing to Americans, had some very harsh words to say about Mormonism in the context of Romney and the LDS Church’s PR plan:

He says although the Mormon Church wages an expensive public relations campaign, using terms familiar to appeal to evangelicals, the core teachings of the church do not line up with scripture and are inconsistent with evangelical Christianity.

If the Southern Baptists respond to the LDS PR campaign with their own… wow.

About the 2nd-tier candidates Sam Brownback and Mike Huckabee, Land had some positive statements:

“They don’t have to convince other social conservatives they’re one of them,” Land said. “They just have to convince other social conservatives they can win.”

He was slightly more effusive in support of Huckabee, but they have been allies in Southern Baptist denominational politics in the past, so that must be taken with a grain of salt.

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Brownback campaign: Romney misleading voters

I think that this press release just about says it all. No need to comment. Apparently this was triggered by the Romney campaign circulating statements comparing Sam Brownback and Mitt Romney’s record on abortion:

 Mitt Romney’s Campaign Misleads Voters about Senator Brownback’s Position on Abortion

"Mitt Romney’s flip flops are enough to make John Kerry blush."

Alexandria, VA – Documentation surfaced over the weekend that the Romney for President Exploratory Committee is misleading voters.

In an e-mail circulated to right-to-life leaders on February 8, 2007, a key Romney staffer wrote: "Just like Sam Brownback, Mitt was once pro-choice but changed his views upon being elected to office… When Brownback was elected to office, that is when he also had a conversion and voted with the pro-life movement."

Brownback for President National Campaign Committee Member Dr. Jack Willke, who was President of National Right to Life for ten years, responded: "Senator Brownback has always been pro-life, and has never made a statement or cast any vote to the contrary."

This false allegation by the Romney campaign comes in light of recent evidence that Romney has switched positions on abortion at least three times. Below are direct quotes from Mitt Romney on the issue of abortion:

CHRONOLOGY OF MITT ROMNEY’S ABORTION POSITIONS (IN HIS OWN WORDS):

1994: Mitt Romney was pro-choice

"I believe that abortion should be safe and legal in this country. I have since the time that my mom took that position when she ran in 1970 as a US Senate candidate. I believe that since Roe v. Wade has been the law for 20 years we should sustain and support it." (Joan Vennochi, "Romney’s Revolving World," The Boston Globe, 3/2/06)


2001: Mitt Romney was not pro-choice

"I do not wish to be labeled pro-choice." (Mitt Romney, Letter to the Editor, The Salt Lake Tribune, 7/12/01)

2002: Mitt Romney was again pro-choice

"I respect and will protect a woman’s right to choose. This choice is a deeply personal one … Women should be free to choose based on their own beliefs, not mine and not the government’s." (Stephanie Ebbert, "Clarity Sought On Romney’s Abortion Stance," The Boston Globe, 7/3/05)

2007: Mitt Romney acknowledges he was "effectively pro-choice," but says he "was always for life."

January 2007: "Over the last multiple years, as you know, I have been effectively pro-choice." (Bruce Smith, "Romney Campaigns in SC with Sen. DeMint," The Associated Press, 1/29/07)

February 2007: "I am firmly pro-life… I was always for life." (Jim Davenport, "Romney Affirms Opposition to Abortion," The Associated Press, 2/9/2007)

"Mitt Romney’s flip flops are enough to make John Kerry blush," Brownback for President Campaign Manager Rob Wasinger said. "It is absurd of Mitt Romney to compare himself to Senator Brownback on the right to life issue."

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