Romney and race

I don’t know if Mitt Romney truly believes what he says or not. After several of the comments that I got on this story, I thought that I would post the video and ask those Romney supporters to defend this.

Tim Russert asks Mitt Romney about race and his faith. Romney supports his faith. This is good. Governor Romney could have stopped there but he didn’t. He added that his father marched with Martin Luther King. His father walked out the Republican convention in part because Goldwater was not embracing civil rights. He continued that his mother was also a champion of civil rights.

Let’s look at each of these points individually. First there is a claim that George Romney marched with Martin Luther King. A story in the on-line journal Politico states that several witnesses saw Martin Luther King walk hand-in-hand with then Governor George Romney. One witness, Ashby Richardson, states, “The press is being disingenuous in terms of reporting what actually happened. I remember it vividly. I was only 15 or 20 feet from where both of them were.” Then there is the account by David Broder of the Washington Post and Stephen Hess in the 1967 book, The Republican Establishment: The Present and Future of the G.O.P. On the other side of the coin where are the civil rights leaders. Where is Jesse Jackson and Andrew Young? They were there, weren’t they? They would know. There should also be some pictures.

The Detroit Press reports Longtime Detroit civil rights activist Arthur Johnson said Thursday he clearly recalls marching with former Gov. George Romney in a fair housing demonstration in Grosse Pointe in 1963. But Martin Luther King Jr., who led a major civil rights march down in Detroit days earlier did not attend, Johnson said.

Johnson said Romney, who died in 1995, was a stalwart on civil rights issues, but, contrary to statements made by his son and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, he cannot remember George Romney and King ever marching together.  (Daily Kos and TCR have more on this.  GoTV posting on Kos has some photos.  The photos support the fact that George Romney and Martin Luther King didn’t march together.  )

It seems that Mitt was not accurate when he said that his father marched with Martin Luther King. Romney’s own web site goes out of its to say that George Romney was a champion of civil rights and that he did march for civil rights causes. Romney could have said that his father marched with civil rights leaders, that would have been truthful.

Now, let’s turn to the fact that George Romney walked out of the 1964 GOP convention. Mitt Romney said, “You may recall that my dad walked out of the Republican convention in 1964 in San Francisco in part because Barry Goldwater, in his speech, gave my dad the impression that he was someone who was going to be weak on civil rights.” The 1964 GOP platform on civil rights - the platform promises “full implementation and faithful execution of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and all other civil rights statutes” and “improvements of civil rights statutes adequate to changing needs of our times.” That sounds pretty good but the GOP did not support busing. It was called federally sponsored inverse discrimination. George Romney wrote a letter to Barry Goldwater after the 1964 election. The summary of the letter is here. Very enlightening. The more that I read that letter it seems that George Romney was a very thoughtful and principled man.

 
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2 Responses to “Romney and race”

  1. Mitt is a humble and good man who has impeccable character and a record of extraordinary success in both business and his personal life. I have met him in person and can vouch for him.

    Fine people of America, don’t let hate speech and twisting of facts fool you. Take another look at Mitt’s speech and judge for yourself what kind of man this is:

    http://mitt-tv.mittromney.com/?showid=718280

    Add to this the great character of his father George, who Mitt will surely be measured by, and it is hard to imagine Americans wanting anything more or less than Mitt Romney for President.

  2. Jed -

    Hated speech? What hate speech? I don’t hate Mitt Romney. For that matter, I don’t hate any of the candidates. I have critically looked at what Mitt said. Did I miss quote him?

    I’m sorry your personal “okay” that Mitt is a very nice principled man, doesn’t mean that he should be president. My barber is a very nice principled man, he shouldn’t be president either.

    The bottom line is that Mitt Romney in this instance and several others, stretched the truth. His father didn’t march with MLK. He wasn’t endorsed by the NRA. Mitt didn’t change the metamphetamine laws. Mitt has asked Obama to retract a statement that he had regarding collateral damage in Afghanistan. He was on with Hannity who pushed Romney. Romney took the bait and ran with it. As it turned out, Mitt Romney was 100% wrong and never apologized to Obama, at least not that I know of. Mitt Romney was unaware or ignored the fact that Hamid Karzi was in Washington that week to bring up that very subject with President Bush. Bush officially stated that there were too many civilian deaths and that we needed to do better. Wouldn’t a principled, decent, humble man have publicly apologized to Mr. Obama? What about the Obama-Osama mix up? Did Romney ever apologize for that or did he have a spokesperson say that it was just a misstatement. You don’t have to answer this one. I know the answer.

    Thanks for your comments.