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Home » Blogs » Ann Coulter's blog
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If Not Romney, Who? If Not Now, When?

By Ann Coulter | November 17, 2011 | 18:36

A  A
Ann Coulter's picture

So now, apparently, we have to go through the cycle of the media pushing Newt Gingrich. This is going to be fantastic.

In addition to having an affair in the middle of Clinton's impeachment; apologizing to Jesse Jackson on behalf of J.C. Watts -- one of two black Republicans then in Congress –- for having criticized "poverty pimps," and then inviting Jackson to a State of the Union address; cutting a global warming commercial with Nancy Pelosi; supporting George Soros' candidate Dede Scozzafava in a congressional special election; appearing in public with the Rev. Al Sharpton to promote nonspecific education reform; and calling Paul Ryan's plan to save Social Security "right-wing social engineering," we found out this week that Gingrich was a recipient of Freddie Mac political money.

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(Even I will admit, however, that Newt was great when he was chairman of GOPAC back in the '90s with Gay Gaines at the helm.)

Although Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- the institutions most responsible for the nation's current financial crisis -- were almost entirely Democratic cash cows, they managed to dirty up enough Republicans to make it seem like bipartisan corruption.

Democrats sucked hundreds of millions of dollars out of these institutions: Franklin Raines, $90 million; Jamie Gorelick, $26.4 million; Jim Johnson, $20 million.

By contrast, Republicans came cheap. For the amazingly good price of only $300,000 apiece, Fannie and Freddie bought the good will of former Reps. Vin Weber, R-Minn., Susan Molinari, R-N.Y., and Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. Former Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., was even cheaper at $240,000.

(Correction: After Gingrich admitted last week to receiving $300,000 from Freddie, we found out this week that it was actually closer to $1.6 million.)

So now conservatives shy away from denouncing these crooked organizations for fear of running into Vin Weber at a cocktail party.

Sorry, guys -- on the plus side, you're millionaires, but on the downside, you've earned the contempt of your fellow man.

The mainstream media keep pushing alternatives to Mitt Romney not only because they are terrified of running against him, but also because they want to keep Republicans fighting, allowing Democrats to get a four-month jump on us.

Meanwhile, everyone knows the nominee is going to be Romney.

That's not so bad if you think the most important issues in this election are defeating Obama and repealing Obamacare.

There may be better ways to stop Obamacare than Romney, but, unfortunately, they're not available right now. (And, by the way, where were you conservative purists when Republicans were nominating Waterboarding-Is-Torture-Jerry-Falwell-Is-an-Agent-of-Intolerance-My-Good-Friend-Teddy-Kennedy-Amnesty-for-Illegals John McCain-Feingold for president?)
Among Romney's positives is the fact that he has a demonstrated ability to trick liberals into voting for him. He was elected governor of Massachusetts -- one of the most liberal states in the union -- by appealing to Democrats, independents and suburban women.

He came close to stopping the greatest calamity to befall this nation since Pearl Harbor by nearly beating Teddy Kennedy in a Senate race. (That is when he said a lot of the things about which he's since "changed his mind.") If he had won, we'd be carving his image on Mount Rushmore.
He is not part of the Washington establishment, so he won't be caught taking money from

Freddie Mac or cutting commercials with Nancy Pelosi.

Also, Romney will be the first Republican presidential nominee since Ronald Reagan who can talk. Liberals are going to have to dust off their playbook from 30 years ago to figure out how to run against a Republican who isn't a tongue-tied marble-mouth.

As we've known for years, his negatives are: Romneycare and Mormonism.

We look forward with cheery anticipation to an explosion of news stories on some of the stranger aspects of Mormonism. The articles have already been written, but they're not scheduled for release until the day Romney wraps up the nomination.

Inasmuch as the Democrats' only argument for the big-eared beanpole who's nearly wrecked the country is that you must be a racist if you oppose Obama, one assumes a lot of attention will be lavished on the Mormon Church's historical position on blacks. Church founder Joseph Smith said blacks had the curse of Cain on them and banned blacks from the priesthood, a directive that was not revoked until 1978.

There's no evidence that this was a policy fiercely pushed by Mitt Romney. To the contrary, when his father, George Romney, was governor of Michigan, he was the most pro-civil rights elected official in the entire country, far ahead of any Democrat.

No one is worried Romney will double-cross us on repealing Obamacare. We worry that Romneycare will make it harder for him to get elected.

But, again, Romney is the articulate Republican. He's already explained how mandating health insurance in one particular wealthy, liberal Northeastern state is different from inflicting it on the entire country. Our Constitution establishes a federalist system that allows experimentation with different ideas in the individual states.

As governor, Romney didn't have the ability to change federal laws requiring hospital emergency rooms to treat every illegal alien, drug dealer and vagrant who walked in the door, then sending the bill to taxpayers. (Although David Axelrod, Michelle Obama, Eric Whitaker and Valerie Jarrett did figure out a way to throw poor blacks out of the University of Chicago Medical Center.)
The Heritage Foundation, a leading conservative think tank, supported Romneycare at the time.

The biggest warning sign should have been that Gingrich supported it, too.

Most important, Romney has said -- forcefully and repeatedly -- that his first day in office he will issue a 50-state waiver from Obamacare and will then seek a formal repeal.

Romney is not going to get to the White House and announce, "The first thing I'm going to do is implement that fantastic national health care plan signed by my pal, Barack!"

Unlike all other major legislation in the nation's history, Obamacare was narrowly passed along partisan lines by an aberrationally large one-party majority in Congress. (Thanks, McCain supporters!) Not one single Republican in Congress voted for it, not even John McCain.
Obamacare is going to be repealed -- provided only that a Republican wins the next presidential election.

If a Republican does not win, however, it will never be repealed. Recall that, in order to boast about the amazing revenue savings under Obamacare, Democrats had to configure the bill so that the taxes to pay for it start right away, but the goodies don't kick in until 2014.
Once people are thrown off their insurance plans and are forced to depend on the government for "free" health care, Obamacare is here to stay. (And Newt Gingrich will be calling plans to tinker with it "right-wing social engineering.")

Instead of sitting on our thumbs, wishing Ronald Reagan were around, or chasing the latest mechanical rabbit flashed by the media, conservatives ought to start rallying around Romney as the only Republican who has a shot at beating Obama. We'll attack him when he's president.

It's fun to be a purist, but let's put that on hold until Obama and his abominable health care plan are gone, please.

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Comments

Okay, who kidnapped Ann and hacked into her NB account?

Submitted by Dave. on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 6:49pm.

RINOmney will get trounced in the GE if he is the repub nominee.

I'm not all that sure sure he even qualifies as a RINO, either.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

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Dave

Submitted by Free Stinker on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 6:59pm.

Mitt is more of a DIABLO, isn't he?

Democrat In All But Label Only

 

   /// Sarah Palin Fan since July 11, 2007 ///    خال

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LOL, Free

Submitted by Dave. on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 9:13pm.

I had forgotten about that one.

I'm starting to worry about Ann.

First it was her crush on RINO Chris Christie that concerned me, and now that he has decided not to run she switches her allegiance to a liberal repub.

I hate to tell her, but merely slowing down what is happening to America isn't going to cut it. We need a president that will halt its progression, then work to begin undoing the damage.

That will require someone with the stones to tell the other side NO!, both early and often.

Romney is a likable guy, but he just isn't that person.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

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Is Ann's new boyfriend a RINO?

Submitted by frank14 on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 11:01am.

I can't believe she's become such a sellout to Christie and Mitt. But then again Laura Ingraham told us she supported the Supercommittee sellout. Being in the media spotlight eventually corrupts many conservatives.

These RINOs don't realize that the New York Times and the rest of the lib media are ready to do a story a day on the sins of the Mormon Church the day Mitt gets the nomination. He's simply unelectable as a Republican. As a Democrat... no problem. We never hear a word about Harry Reid's faith because he doesn't practice it in his political life.

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Ann a lawyer and so is Mitt

Submitted by upcountrywater on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 7:18pm.

Tho in 2008 I was cheering for Mitt...as in
...Go Mitt Go...
That was then... Cain is now.

Mitt is much better than o'bama.

Oh and another garment wearing Polygamist ranch raid will be Ooh so cute.

You Didn't Build That.

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I don't know

Submitted by bkeyser on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 7:19pm.

We all held our noses and voted fr McCain; we'll do the same with Romney. And I think Ann is right - independents would prefer Romney over Newt, or Cain, or Perry.

As for Newt, I've been saying since the first debate that he should be the Chief of Staff. He's got the connections, the intelligence, and won't mind being the next Karl Rove.

How about Romney/Bachmann?

I don't like Romney, but an awful lot of people seem -at this point- to forgive Newt for his transgressions; couldn't we do the same for Romney? All the while holding his feet to the Tea Party fire, that is. And if Bachmann is aboard you get the strong conservative influence as a backdrop.

Unfortunately, I think it will be Romney. He's the only one that will court enough independents to beat the boy wonder but if we can stay on him until the nomination, threatening him to live up to his word, he might actually do it; especially if he's succeeding a one-term president.

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I don't like Romney either.

Submitted by acaiguana on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 8:17pm.

Sigh.

ACA

...

Quoted from: 'Acaiguana notes from the Underground' (Soon to be at theaters near you)

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Romney -

Submitted by Agnostic on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 11:01am.

There is reason to worry about Romney and I think everyone knows those reasons so I will attempt not to be repetitive.  However, Romney does have some serious upside in his economic instincts/knowledge and that he has run the gauntlet before.

Romney, imho, will attempt his best to follow through with his campaign promises including making Obamacare a useless piece of legislature via waivers and rolling back the initiated items (mostly taxes of some sort).

The problem with Romney will come if and when he is faced with a Democrat Congress and how much he would capitulate for political expediency.  Otherwise, he will be business friendly and keep his promises.  Far from an ideal candidate from a Conservative point of view but one that has the knowledge and leadership skills to help the economy.

He is not McCain who ran on the idea of being the same old Maverick he always was.  At least Romney is recognizing a change is needed in his image and doesn't play to the media meme.

That being said, I hope we end up with a better choice but voting for Romney isn't the same as voting for McCain and he would handily beat Obama in debates.  Remember the debates will be by Obama's rules and all the questions are going to come from the left and in this area Romney, being accustomed to Mass. politics, would actually have an advantage.

. . Socialist = Modern Liberal = Parasitoid
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Well...

Submitted by ProudAmerican58 on Thu, 11/17/2011 - 9:14pm.

http://hotair.com/greenroom/archives/2011/11/17/no-ann-coulter-you-could...

What he said.

That's just my opinion; I could be wrong. -- Dennis Miller
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This Blonde Disavows THAT Blonde

Submitted by Blonde on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 12:36am.

Ann's lost her mind.

Unlike Mitt, who is taking those of us, who are conservative, for granted...that we will, as Ann says, vote for him with a clothespin on our noses....Newt understands it is now or never. Mitt, OTOH, is actively courting the middle, and TAKING US FOR GRANTED.

Quite obviously, Newt is first, last, and always a politician. But he is a SMART one.

And I believe he understands the conservative imperative. Right now. I trust Newt to understand who may elect him, unlike Romney, who will be Obama light. Furthermore, if he is the candidate, Obamacare is off the table.....with Mitt's background, he can't gain any traction being against it.

Sorry, this time around, I'm all in for the conservative. I don't care if that's Rick Santorum. No more RINO's...and Mitt, whilst a pretty, pretty boy, with his beautiful hair and faux regular guy wardrobe....isn't doing it for me.

DRAFT ALLEN WEST.

P.S. Ann Coulter can't write for crap.

Handy Reference Guide to Obama's Gaffes and Goofs ~ Currently Numbering 200 (and Counting)

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Amen to that Blonde!!!

Submitted by Grumpy in Arizona on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 1:51pm.

All-in for a real conservative this time around!
Why Ann is pushing the RINO Willard (who will not admit the failings of his signature legislation - Romney-care) over all other conservative candidates (who actually admit when they have made a mistake) is beyond me. IMO, Ann needs to stick to doing what she does best – making liberal heads explode, and stop trying to influence her fellow conservatives with fear-tactics about why we should settle for a RINO because they may appeal to democrats and independents.

BTW – Willard is not really that great a debater because he comes across as insincere… And (even though the “Presidential Debate Schedule has been announced) who say’s there actually will be debates??? If Obummer has to go one-on-one with the likes of either Newt or Herman, I predict the debates will be cancelled for some phony reason.

- Grump :o)

"I wish I had an answer to that because I'm tired of answering that question." - Yogi Berra, (Baseball Great and Philosopher)
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Was November 2010 really that long ago?

Submitted by mom_rox on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 12:54am.

A quick analysis looking at the latest Real Clear Politics poll average:

  Romney (and Huntsman): 24.2%
  remaining non-Romney (excl. Paul): 55.6%
  undecided: 12.4%

To answer Ann's question: If not Romney, who? - We'll know the answer after the first few months of the primaries. It may very well be Romney - let him earn it.

If not now, when? - again, we'll know after the first few months of the primaries. Why the rush to anoint a nominee before the first votes are cast? We need to let the nomination process play out.

While Romney is by no means a longshot at the nomination, he is also not the clear nominee - the race is still fluid. President Obama will have a tough race regardless of the GOP nominee because he will have to defend his administration's actions.

Coulter: The mainstream media keep pushing alternatives to Mitt Romney not only because they are terrified of running against him, but also because they want to keep Republicans fighting, allowing Democrats to get a four-month jump on us. (bolds mine)

??? Any idea of what Ann is talking about here?

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You feeling okay, Ann?

Submitted by Kaleidoscopic God on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 9:31am.

This is not the Ann Coulter I know.

You can't take a guess for another 2 hours?
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Ann liked Romney in 08, too

Submitted by GW on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 9:37am.

Gotta admit I'm a bit disappointed in Ann on this one. But she's standing by her man.

"Unfortunately, some people use belief-based facts rather than fact-based beliefs." -Par for the Course on Wed, 04/18/2012 - 5:38pm
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Will the GOP Blow It?

Submitted by upcountrywater on Fri, 11/18/2011 - 2:38pm.

By, Thomas Sowell

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said that a good catchphrase could stop thinking for 50 years. One of the often-repeated catchphrases of our time — “It’s the economy, stupid!” — has already stopped thinking in some quarters for a couple of decades.

There is no question that the state of the economy can affect elections. But there is also no iron law that all elections will be decided by the state of the economy.

Other Republican presidential candidates who went the “moderate” route — Bob Dole and John McCain — also came across as neither fish nor fowl and went down to defeat.

Now the smart money inside the Beltway is saying that Mitt Romney, who is nothing if not versatile in his positions, is the Republicans’ best hope for replacing Obama.

There has probably never been a time in the history of this country when we more urgently needed to get a president out of the White House, before he ruined the country. But will the conservative Republican candidates let that guide them?

You Didn't Build That.

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