Liberal columnist accuses Romney of opportunism for opposing Detroit bail-out

Below are key passages from Joan Vennochi’s withering column in the Boston Globe taking apart Romney’s New York Times op-ed. The parts I’ve taken out are much tougher than the parts I’ve left in, but the former strike me as anti-Romney boiler plate and so have less interest to me.

Vennochi writes:

If the auto industry could reinvent itself as quickly as Mitt Romney, it wouldn’t need a bailout.

Let Detroit go bankrupt, Romney opined in yesterday’s New York Times; if automakers get the rescue package they want, they will stay “the suicidal course of declining market shares, insurmountable labor and retiree burdens, technology atrophy, product inferiority and never-ending job losses.”

Just last January, Romney won Michigan’s Republican primary by telling autoworkers what they wanted to hear. Somewhere, John McCain must be choking on the latest opportunistic words from his ex-rival.

During their showdown last winter, Michigan’s native son lambasted McCain for truthfully informing autoworkers their jobs aren’t “coming back.” The former Massachusetts governor pledged to fight for every job, promising primary voters, “If I am president of the United States, I will not rest until Michigan is back.”

In speeches across the state, Romney also blamed Washington for Detroit’s woes. “Look at Washington. What have they done to help the domestic auto industry? Look, you can’t keep on throwing anvils at Michigan and the auto industry and then say, ‘How come they are not swimming well?’ ” he declared….

In his new book, “Do The Right Thing,” Mike Huckabee, who also ran for the Republican nomination in 2008, rips Romney as a flip-flopper who switched positions on abortion, gay rights, gun control, and campaign finance reform. The former Arkansas governor also writes that Romney’s record was “anything but conservative until he changed all the light bulbs in his chandelier in time to run for president.”

Indeed, Romney was never able to grasp the differences between corporate and political turnarounds.

In the private sector, dramatic retooling is key to survival. As a businessman, Romney understood how to do that. His turnaround of the Salt Lake City Olympics is often cited as an example.

In the public sector, seismic shifts in position create suspicion and undercut credibility. As a politician, Romney continues to lose his….

This is a presidential candidate who cast himself as the auto workers’ champion. “I hear people say, ‘It’s gone, those jobs are gone, transportation’s gone, it’s not coming back.’ I’m going to fight for every single job. I’m going to rebuild the industry. I’m going to take burdens off the back of the auto industry,” Romney said in January.

Back then, he never mentioned bankruptcy as the way to do it.

Never underestimate Romney’s willingness to shamelessly reverse direction, to get where he wants to go.

Joan Vennochi can be reached at vennochi@globe.com.

Bob Vandervoort, who sent the article, writes:

If Romney said, “Here’s my 10 point plan for saving the Big 3 of Detroit!” I’d be like, well that’s Romney being true to his Michigan roots, I could respect that, though I might disagree with a point or two. Instead, Mr. Calculator is saying, “My internal polling/focus groups tell me that bailouts are unpopular among Republican primary voters… let me pivot on a dime!” Good grief, Charlie Brown.


Posted by Lawrence Auster at November 20, 2008 06:34 PM | Send
    

Email entry

Email this entry to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):