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==Criticism==
==Criticism==


In the speech Romney claimed, “I saw my father march with [[Martin Luther King]].” However, there is no historical evidence for the claim, and it has been determined that [[George Romney]] and Rev. King were never in the same city during a civil-rights march. <ref>{{cite web | title="Whas It All a Dream?" | date=2007-12-20 | accessdate = 2007-12-20 | work=Boston Phoenix | url= http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid53200.aspx}}</ref>
In the speech Romney claimed, “I saw my father march with [[Martin Luther King]].” However, there is no historical evidence for the claim, and it has been determined that [[George W. Romney]] and Rev. King were never in the same city during a civil-rights march. <ref>{{cite web | title="Whas It All a Dream?" | date=2007-12-20 | accessdate = 2007-12-20 | work=Boston Phoenix | url= http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid53200.aspx}}</ref>


While the speech received wide praise,<ref>[http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,5143,695234288,00.html Opinion pieces and editorials linked to by Deseret News],</ref> <ref>[http://www.timesandseasons.org/?p=4283#more-4283 List of prominent commentaries linked to at Times and Seasons website]</ref> [[Eugene Robinson (journalist)|Eugene Robinson]] has argued that Romney implied that nonreligious people cannot be proper Americans, and called that assertion "a form of bigotry"; [[MSNBC]]'s [[Keith Olbermann]] called the speech a "shameful and shameless self-comparison to the [[JFK|thirty-fifth president]]."<ref>[[Eugene Robinson (journalist)|Eugene Robinson]] on ''[[Countdown with Keith Olbermann]]'', December 7, 2007. A clip containing this comment can be found [http://onegoodmove.org/1gm/1gmarchive/2007/12/romney_is_a_mor.html here.]</ref>
While the speech received wide praise,<ref>[http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,5143,695234288,00.html Opinion pieces and editorials linked to by Deseret News],</ref> <ref>[http://www.timesandseasons.org/?p=4283#more-4283 List of prominent commentaries linked to at Times and Seasons website]</ref> [[Eugene Robinson (journalist)|Eugene Robinson]] has argued that Romney implied that nonreligious people cannot be proper Americans, and called that assertion "a form of bigotry"; [[MSNBC]]'s [[Keith Olbermann]] called the speech a "shameful and shameless self-comparison to the [[JFK|thirty-fifth president]]."<ref>[[Eugene Robinson (journalist)|Eugene Robinson]] on ''[[Countdown with Keith Olbermann]]'', December 7, 2007. A clip containing this comment can be found [http://onegoodmove.org/1gm/1gmarchive/2007/12/romney_is_a_mor.html here.]</ref>

Revision as of 22:04, 20 December 2007

U.S. 2008 Presidential candidate Mitt Romney

Mitt Romney's "Faith in America" speech was delivered at the George Bush Presidential Library on December 6, 2007, by former governor of Massachusettes Mitt Romney, a Republican candidate for the 2008 presidential nomination.

Before the speech

Willard Mitt Romney is the third U.S. presidential candidate of the Mormon faith to have a high likelihood of achieving a major political party's nomination. The first of these three was Romney's own father, George W. Romney, a progressive on Civil Rights who was the savior of American Motors Corporation, who, while governor of Michigan, stood in 1967 as a popular alternative to Richard M. Nixon for the Republican nomination. The second was Mo Udall, the liberal Arizona congressman who gained considerable support throughout the 1976 primary race as a rival to centrist Jimmy Carter, who campaigned as a devout evangelical. During the latter part of Udall's campaign, Udall faced criticism from black activists concerning the fact that the church stated as Udall's religious affiliation, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the formal name of the Mormon church), barred blacks from holding its lay priesthood (which policy, incidentally, the LDS Church did not change until 1978). In response to this criticism, Udall withdrew nominal affiliation with the denomination in 1976.

Mitt Romney differs from Udall in Romney's social conservativism; yet, similarly to Udall's rivalry with the outspokenly evangelical candidate Jimmy Carter, one of Romney's chief rivals in 2007 was also a self-professing evangelical and former Southern governor, Mike Huckabee, who is a social conservative populist.[1]

While the speech was perceived a response to Huckabee's mercurial rise in the polls in late November within first caucusing Iowa, soon to cast ballots on Januaury 3 (in which likely caucus goers are deemed to be over 40-per-cent evangelical), with commentators opining that Romney hoped it would effectively answer the media's longtime pre-occupation with the hurdle manifested by Romney's heterodox faith, Romney's campaign billed the speech as extolling American freedom of worship while helping to satisfy public curiosity about how Romney's strain of religious devotion would inform presidential governance.

Summary

Mitt Romney gave a speech at the George Herbert Walker Bush Presidential Library in Texas, with the former president providing introductory remarks. The speech, which was widely regarded as referencing that of then-Senator John F. Kennedy's September 1960 pledge not to allow Catholic doctrine to inform policy, discussed the role of religion in American society and politics.

Romney's speech gives primacy to the American Constitutional right of religious liberty, which produces cultural diversity and vibrancy of dialogue. He called for public acknowledgements of God such as within Holidays religious displays. Romney said, "Freedom requires religion just as religion requires freedom."[2]. He cited a religious nature to historic abolitionists' campaigns, the campaign for American Civil Rights, and the contemporary campaign for the Right to Life. Romney advocated maintanance of a separation of Church and State, stating that he, as president, would decline directives from churches' hierarchies, including that of the Mormon church.

Romney said while there are those who would prefer he indicated he holds his LDS faith merely as a tradition, in actual fact he believes in his faith and tries to live according to its teachings, and while sacraments and confession of Romney's "church's beliefs about Christ may not all be the same as those of other faiths," he still holds Christ "the Son of God and Savior of mankind." Romney declined to address further the specifics of his Mormonism, implying that any compulsion to do so would counter the Constitutional prohibition of a religion test for political office.

Criticism

In the speech Romney claimed, “I saw my father march with Martin Luther King.” However, there is no historical evidence for the claim, and it has been determined that George W. Romney and Rev. King were never in the same city during a civil-rights march. [3]

While the speech received wide praise,[4] [5] Eugene Robinson has argued that Romney implied that nonreligious people cannot be proper Americans, and called that assertion "a form of bigotry"; MSNBC's Keith Olbermann called the speech a "shameful and shameless self-comparison to the thirty-fifth president."[6]

In an interview with Newsweek, Romney said, "I don't think I defined religious liberty....it includes all, all forms of personal conviction....The people who don't have a particular faith have a personal conviction. I said all forms of personal conviction. And personal conviction includes a sense of right and wrong and any host of beliefs someone might have. Obviously in this nation our religious liberty includes the ability to believe or not believe."[7]

University of Chicago law profesor Geoffrey R. Stone argues that America's Founding Fathers, as freethinkers whose ideals sprung more from the Enlightenment, were reacting to the pieties of Colonial-era Dissenters from Anglicanism (as had arose from the Reformation/Counter-Reformation) more than they were expressing these pieties.[8] Historian Jan Shipps finds Mitt's reference to the Founders' piety to be quintessentially Mormon.[9]

Immediate responses from fellow Republican candidates

After the speech, one of the two current Republican front runners, Rudolph Giuliani said that Romney had done "what he had to do." Said Giuliani. "It would be better if he didn't have to do that."

On the Today show, Huckabee used Romney's speech as an opportunity to emphasize his own "authentic" views as did Fred Thompson in an radio interview in Iowa. "Sen. John McCain acknowledged being locked up with atheist POWs who nevertheless were 'patriots' in an interview with ABC News".[10]

On Fox News Sunday, Huckabee said it was inappropriate for voters to consider the tenets of Mormonism in judging Romney's candidacy, but rather should judge Romney on his record.[11]

Republican candidate and ideological Libertarian Ron Paul released a statement saying that while Paul feels uncomfortable talking about his faith in the political arena, he supports religious tolerance, comes to his own faith through Jesus Christ, and believes any attacks implying Romney unfit to serve only due Romney's faith "fly in the face of everything America stands for."

"Comma problem"

After the speech was delivered, Romney's advisors told reporters off the record that Romney said that through its means he wanted to address his "comma problem": the common practice to put next to his name in media reports, "(comma) who is a Mormon (comma)."

See also

References

  1. ^ "Evangelicals help propel Huckabee into the lead, poll shows" Dec. 9, 2007, Kansas City Star
  2. ^ MSNBC "On the ground at Romney speech" 6 December 2007
  3. ^ ""Whas It All a Dream?"". Boston Phoenix. 2007-12-20. Retrieved 2007-12-20.
  4. ^ Opinion pieces and editorials linked to by Deseret News,
  5. ^ List of prominent commentaries linked to at Times and Seasons website
  6. ^ Eugene Robinson on Countdown with Keith Olbermann, December 7, 2007. A clip containing this comment can be found here.
  7. ^ Romney quote in Newsweek
  8. ^ Geoffrey R. Stone's commentary
  9. ^ Jan Shipps' commentary
  10. ^ "Rebecca Walsh: Romney propped up bigots" op-ed piece, Dec. 12, 2007 Salt Lake Trubune
  11. ^ Huckabee and McCain on Fox News Sunday, Dec. 9, 2007