We were given an
insight into that seemingly premeditated “no choice” in a New York
Times article dated September 8, 2007. It reported that, during a 2002
meeting in a gay bar with Log Cabin Republicans, Romney “promised to
obey the courts’ ultimate ruling and not champion a fight on either
side of the issue”—a promise he most definitely kept, despite head
fakes to gullible conservatives, pressing them to think he was crusading
to protect marriage, children and defend the constitution.
I met with Governor
Romney earlier this year with about 10 other people from Chicago.
Impeccably dressed, he sat at the head of the table and gave a powerful
presentation on his healthcare policies, taxes and, of course, how much
he opposed homosexual marriage and its bad effects on children. When it
came time to ask questions, I politely asked him why, in spite of his
claims of opposition and concern, he had in fact been the one who began
homosexual marriage in Massachusetts? —How was it that he ordered the
rewording of marriage certificates and threatened state and local
officials with firing if they did not comply?
He erupted in anger. He
asked if I were an attorney and then volunteered emphatically: “I am a
graduate of Harvard Law School!” An aide tried to calm him down, but
he continued to accuse me of lying. “She’s not telling the truth,”
he said. Those are the moments you are glad your reputation for honesty
is firmly in tact—and that you have all the documents necessary to
prove your accusation.
So when James Rappaport,
former head of the Massachusetts Republican Party held a press
conference recently to announce his endorsement of Rudy Giuliani, I
could resonate with his observations. Rappaport, who served when Romney
was governor, said Romney “has a strong record of showmanship as
opposed to actual performance.” On his relationship with the State
Legislature, “His word is no good … Mitt Romney would say one thing
in a meeting and literally go out of the meeting to the press and tell
the opposite story. There was no desire in the legislature to be
accommodating to him because they couldn’t trust him…. Romney will
be clear today on what he believes today, and he’ll be clear tomorrow
on what he believes tomorrow, but they may be different things.”
Mitt Romney is a
duplicitous man, and his most damning duplicity has brought about a sea
change in marriage and family that our country may never recover from.
He may have had “no
choice,” but I do