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Mitt Romney Worked Chauffeur

March 26, 2012 by · Comments Off on Mitt Romney Worked Chauffeur 

Mitt Romney Worked Chauffeur, Mitt Romney’s first job was a chauffeur for a university physics department. One summer, he also worked as a security guard at a Chrysler plant. Willard Mitt Romney (born March 12, 1947) is an American businessman and politician. He was the 70th Governor of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 and is a candidate for the 2012 Republican Party presidential nomination.

The son of George W. Romney (the former Governor of Michigan) and Lenore Romney, Mitt Romney was raised in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and later served as a Mormon missionary in France. He married Ann Romney in 1969 and they have five children. He received his undergraduate degree from Brigham Young University, and then earned a joint JD and MBA from Harvard University.

Romney entered the management consulting business, which led to a position at Bain & Company. Eventually serving as CEO, Romney brought the company out of crisis. He was co-founder and head of the spin-off company Bain Capital, a private equity investment firm that became highly profitable and one of the largest such firms in the nation.

His wealth helped fund most of his future political campaigns. Active in his church, he served as ward bishop and later stake president in his area. He ran as the Republican candidate in the 1994 U.S. Senate election in Massachusetts, losing to long-time incumbent Ted Kennedy. Romney organized and steered the 2002 Winter Olympics as head of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee, and helped turn the troubled games into a financial success.

Romney was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 2002 but did not seek re-election in 2006. He presided over a series of spending cuts and increases in fees that eliminated an up to $1.5 billion deficit. He also signed into law the Massachusetts health care reform legislation, which provided near-universal health insurance access via subsidies and state-level mandates and was the first of its kind in the nation. During the course of his political career, his positions or rhetorical emphasis have shifted more towards American conservatism in several areas.

Romney ran for the Republican nomination in the 2008 U.S. presidential election, winning several primaries and caucuses, but eventually losing the nomination to John McCain. In the following years, he gave speeches and raised campaign funds on behalf of fellow Republicans. On June 2, 2011, Romney announced that he would seek the 2012 Republican presidential nomination. The results of the caucuses and primaries so far place him as the leader in the race.

Mitt Romney 2012

January 2, 2012 by · Comments Off on Mitt Romney 2012 

Mitt Romney 2012Mitt Romney 2012, Mitt Romney has an excellent shot at winning the Iowa caucuses on Tuesday — and a major lead heading into the Jan. 10 New Hampshire primary. If he wins both contests, the former governor of deep-blue Massachusetts would all but sew up the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.

Somehow an increasingly conservative Republican Party that has flirted with and rejected a number of thoroughly conservative candidates seems ready to settle on a slightly robotic, flip-flopping, super-wealthy, unreliably conservative Mormon. How on earth did Romney pull that off? Here, five keys to Romney’s success:

1. Second time’s the charm
Romney and Ron Paul are the only candidates in this field who have run for president before, and the GOP tends to pick the next guy in line for the nomination. Aides insist that “Romney’s loss in 2008 taught him a lot,” says Roger Simon at Politico, namely when and how to engage opponents and use his massive campaign war chest. That said, money may not even be the pivotal factor in a victory on Tuesday. If Romney wins in Iowa, he could do it “merely by activating the organization he built [there] for his 2008 presidential campaign,” says Holly Bailey at Yahoo.

2. Romney convinced voters he’s the best “Obama toppler”
Another big advantage of having run before: Romney doesn’t have to introduce himself to voters — he can be a “singularly focused, Obama-destroying machine,” says Michael Scherer at TIME. Mitt delivers his “single-minded message” in short, declarative slogans that “slice the air with the flashy precision of a fruit ninja.” And his audiences “eat it up.” Romney is winning because “no other candidate has yet shown that he or she can compete with Romney’s general election competitiveness.” More than anything, Republicans “want to win. And Romney seems to have Obama’s number.”

3. He avoided the GOP “circular firing squad”
Romney has been able to focus on Obama because his GOP rivals have puzzlingly spared him “the kind of withering attacks that normally confront a frontrunner,” says Alex Roarty at National Journal, sniping at each other instead. “As they form a circular firing squad, Romney stepped back.” Not that his hands are entirely clean, says Politico’s Simon. Mitt’s done his part to attack the only two candidates who “might have blocked Romney’s path to victory” in Iowa: Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry.

4. Mitt modeled his campaign on “Styrofoam”
“Passionless, but not hollow, his campaign has been as buoyant as Styrofoam,” says Alex Castellanos at CNN, and like Styrofoam, it’s “light but stronger than it looks.” It’s “hard to love but, for the same reason, hard to hate.” And it floats no matter how dinged up it gets. And Romney’s strategy should work as well against Obama as it has against his GOP rivals.

5. He’s getting help from his super-PAC friends
Romney hasn’t landed at “the front of the Republican pack at precisely the right moment on gee-whiz alone,” says Patricia Murphy at The Daily Beast. Mitt’s “perfectly timed rise” is largely due to Gingrich’s sudden, hard fall — a collapse engineered in no small way by $3 million worth of attack ads from a Romney-aligned super-PAC called “Restore Our Future.” That group’s “efforts helped to solidify Romney’s position atop the field while providing him an arm’s length distance from the negativity,” says Paul Blumenthal at The Huffington Post. Super-PACs “have come to dominate not just the Iowa contest, but the entire Republican primary season.” And the biggest-spending super-PACs are siding with Romney, who’s also the biggest-spending candidate. That has only “increased the disparity in spending among the candidates.”

Mitt Romney

October 17, 2011 by · Comments Off on Mitt Romney 

Mitt RomneyMitt Romney, The stone building is clad in a busy intersection in the heart of Manhattan’s Upper West. There is little to distinguish it from any other place of worship in New York Modern, which has a simple design, decorated windows and a spire modest – one topped by a golden statue of an angel of the trumpet-management. And that’s the difference: the angel, unknown to most Christians, is called Moroni.

The building is the Manhattan temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, better known worldwide as the Mormons. There are other temples scattered throughout New York, serves a growing community in the city of one of the youngest religions, but faster-spreading throughout the world. Normally associated with the desert mountains of Utah, where it is based, the church more than 6 million members are growing rapidly to prominence in the consciousness of the United States: two Mormons are running for the Republican presidential nomination. In fact, Mitt Romney is a favorite in the race and in 2013 the U.S. could have a Mormon president.

Since there are 15 Mormons in Congress, including Senate Democratic leader, Harry Reid. The right-wing media firebrand Glenn Beck is a Mormon. This is the rock star, Brandon Flowers, lead singer of The Killers, and former Utah governor Jon Huntsman, contending with Romney for the Republican nomination. The Mormons have business hotel chain Marriott International, and displays them – like love great HBO drama – are successful on television. For a faith that was often persecuted, Mormonism, it seems, has never been more American.

“I am not only a New Yorker and a Mormon, but I’m proud of it. I started a family here,” says David Buckner, a business consultant who worship in the temple of Manhattan. For Buckner, 48, who has called New York home since 1995, the city and Mormonism is a perfect fit. “There is a deep respect for different religions here in New York. The people are respectful of our customs and values.”

That’s not true everywhere. Robert Jeffress, a conservative Baptist minister with links to their main rival for the nomination Romney Rick Perry, has recently launched a blistering attack on the faith, calling it a “cult” and saying “is not Christianity.” Others seem to see the appearance of the Mormons in everyday life with anxiety: a survey in June found one in five U.S. voters would oppose a Mormon candidate for president.

And that’s not a reflection of the only concern of the religious right. Mormonism has a strong opinion against gay marriage: it has provided financial support to the campaign to stop same-sex couples are filling marriage rights, especially in California in 2008. The actions of the church sparked protests across the country by activists.

Fred Karger, a gay Republican running in the back of the pack in the race for the nomination in 2012, has become a strong critic of Mormonism. “My biggest concern with the Mormon faith is the basic principle of obedience. If President Romney received a call from the president of the LDS [Latter-day Saints], has no choice but to obey. It is obedience on the family and the country, “he says.

That comment echoes a criticism of President Kennedy, when his Catholicism – and theoretical obligation that the papacy – was under attack. But it also raises the question of what Mormons believe in religion and is spreading rapidly. “In general, many Americans know very little about the Mormon faith,” says David Cohen, a political scientist at the University of Akron.

It began in the 1820 New York, when the church founder, Joseph Smith, claimed to have discovered a holy work, recorded in a set of golden plates, called the Book of Mormon. It includes an account of Jesus’ appearance in the U.S.. Smith assembled a group of followers and, fleeing persecution, began a movement to the west, before being killed by a mob in Illinois. His successors were established in Utah and the controversy continued acceptance of the church of polygamy, allowing men to have multiple wives.

The modern church, however, has always condemned plural marriage, despite continuing anticompetitive practices with several other Christian denominations. For example, many members of special underwear known as “temple garments.” The Church also places special emphasis on the conversion of the dead because of their belief that families are eternal, Mormons feel a duty to posthumously baptize ancestors for all to be together in heaven. That’s why the church is behind an effort to collect genealogical family histories.

Sometimes the limits are exceeded in tracing ancestors. The church became a subject of controversy after the victims of the Holocaust is in its databases. In 2009, it was discovered that the recently deceased mother, Barack Obama, Stanley Ann Dunham, was baptized posthumously.

Of course, while non-Mormons that much of this may seem strange, the same could be said of many traditional practices of other religions. What Mormonism is trying that is not your belief, but its novelty. Prophets of other religions lived hundreds or thousands of years and have become an accepted part of human culture. Mormonism was born in the industrial era. The expansion comes at a time of iPhones and the Internet, and its entry into the mainstream is designed to involve scrutiny of their agenda.

“The church is willing to be more known and a bigger player. You see that as part of its mission church,” says Matthew Burbank, a political expert at the University of Utah.

The LDS is nothing if not media-savvy. It has launched an advertising campaign to “normalize” their image, with portraits of people from diverse backgrounds, with the slogan “I am a Mormon.” “There is a national dialogue going on Mormonism and want to be part of it,” said LDS spokesman Eric Hawkins.

But it is difficult to find the Mormons in Manhattan. Take Natalie Hill, 30, a dancer on Broadway. She does not drink or smoke, which discourages the faith, but does not interfere with your enjoyment of New York, even pens a blog called Mormon in Manhattan. “People are sometimes afraid of what I do not know,” she says. “I am like any other in New York, but I have deep faith that my roots where I came from.”

She is happy to confirm that she wears clothes of the temple – but not when working. “I know that people call” magic underwear “, but I do not use on stage,” he laughs.

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