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Mitt Romney on Government Reform

Former Republican Governor (MA); presidential nominee-apparent

 


It was an insurrection against the Constitution

Some Republicans--some quietly, some publicly--have made clear they don't agree with their colleagues [in minimizing the events of Jan. 6]. "I was there," said Mitt Romney, who was caught in security video being diverted away from the rioters. "What happened was a violent effort to interfere with and prevent the constitutional order of installing a new president. And as such, it was an insurrection against the Constitution. It resulted in severe property damage, severe injuries and death."
Source: CTV News (Canadian TV Network) on Jan. 6th insurrection , May 13, 2021

If we're going to have unity, we need accountability

[On impeachment for Trump inciting an insurrection]: "Well, we're certainly going to have a trial. I wish that weren't necessary, but the president's conduct with regards to the call to Secretary of State Raffensperger in Georgia as well as the incitation towards the insurrection that led to the attack on the Capitol call for a trial," Romney said. "And, you know, if we're going to have unity in our country, I think it's important to recognize the need for accountability, for truth and justice.
Source: Fox News Sunday: Mitt Romney on impeaching Trump 2021 , Jan 24, 2021

Regulation is essential; but it's excessive and outdated

Q: What is your view about the level of federal regulation of the economy right now?

ROMNEY: Regulation is essential. You can't have a free market work if you don't have regulation. As a businessperson, I need to know the regulations. You couldn't have people opening up banks in their garage and making loans. Every free economy has good regulation. At the same time, regulation can become excessive.

Q: Is it excessive now, do you think?

ROMNEY: In some places, yes. Other places, no.

Q: Like where?

ROMNEY: It can become out of date. And what's happened with some of the legislation that's been passed during the president's term, you've seen regulation become excessive, and it's hurt the economy. Let me give you an example. Dodd-Frank includes within it a number of provisions that I think has some unintended consequences that are harmful to the economy. One is it designates a number of banks as too big to fail, and they're effectively guaranteed by the federal government.

Source: First Obama-Romney 2012 Presidential debate , Oct 3, 2012

Regulatory cap: Repeal outdated regulations to make new ones

Q: How will you ensure that policy decisions are fully informed by the best available scientific information?

OBAMA: I directed the Office of Science and Technology Policy to ensure that our policies reflect what science tells us without distortion or manipulation. We appointed scientific advisors based on their credentials and experience, not their politics or ideology. Only by ensuring that scientific data is never distorted or concealed to serve a political agenda, making scientific decisions based on facts, not ideology, and including the public in our decision making process will we harness the power of science to achieve our goals.

ROMNEY: I will ensure that the best available scientific and technical information guides decision-making in my Administration, and avoid the manipulation of science for political gain. And I will establish a regulatory cap, so that agencies spend as much time repealing and streamlining outdated regulations as they spend imposing new ones.

Source: The Top American Science Questions, by sciencedebate.org , Sep 4, 2012

FactCheck: Ryan more liberal than Romney on campaign finance

Paul Ryan does not agree with Gov. Romney on all issues--for example on campaign finance reform: Ryan voted for a ban on soft money donations in 2001 and for disclosure of lobbyist bundled donation in 2007, while Romney says that the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law "hurt the First Amendment" with reform like those Ryan voted for. Obama and Biden agree with Ryan on this issue, too. You can read about all of their differences (and their agreements) in side-by-side form our summary of our book:
Source: Paperback: Obama-Biden vs. Romney-Ryan On The Issues , Aug 27, 2012

Earmark system is broken; ban them with line-item veto

SANTORUM [to Romney]: I suspect you would have supported earmarks if you were in the Senate.

ROMNEY: I would put a ban on earmarks. I think it opens the door to excessive spending on projects that don't need to be done. You voted to the "Bridge to Nowhere." I think these earmarks, we've had it with them. The 6,000 earmarks that were put in place under Speaker Gingrich's term, for instance, were oftentimes tagged on to other bills. We've had thousands of earmarks. They are typically bundled on to other bills.

SANTORUM: You're misrepresenting the facts. What happens in the earmark process was that members of Congress would publicly request these things, put them on paper, and have them allocated, and have them voted on.

ROMNEY: And the president can't veto it?

SANTORUM: He can veto the bill.

ROMNEY: But he can't veto the earmark?

SANTORUM: Well, we tried to do that. I supported a line-item veto.

ROMNEY: That's what I support.

Source: CNN's 2012 GOP Debate on eve of Arizona Primary , Feb 22, 2012

Make government simpler, smaller, and smarter

If tonight were the first message to Congress in a Romney administration, I'd have the courage to tell the American people how it is and tell Congress what we really need to do. I wouldn't spend my time blaming others for how we got in this mess; I'd explain how we're going to get out of it. I'd use the State of the Union to lay out an agenda that will get our country back on track and get our fiscal house in order.

My agenda would make government simpler, smaller, and smarter. As President, I will repeal unnecessary regulations and restore our good credit rating. I will reduce tax rates and simplify the tax code, especially for middle-income Americans. I will streamline regulation, ensure the prompt review of projects, and order agencies to focus on economic growth.

I would pledge to do all that a President can to get America working again. When it comes to the economy, my highest priority would be worrying about your job, not saving my own.

Source: Prebuttal to 2012 State of the Union speech , Jan 24, 2012

2004: Disallowed from appointing Kerry's Senate successor

In 2004, when it appeared possible that Senator Kerry might be elected president, Kennedy successfully pressed the Massachusetts legislature for a change in the law that allowed then-governor Mitt Romney to appoint Kerry's successor. Five years later, suffering from a malignant brain tumor that would eventually take his life and put his Senate seat up for grabs, Kennedy pressed Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick and the legislature to amend the law so the governor COULD appoint a successor who would serve until a special election could be held, presumably preventing a Republican from ever holding the so-called "Kennedy seat."
Source: An Inside Look, by R.B.Scott, p. 75-76 , Nov 22, 2011

I didn't inhale while governor; government is too big

I believe government is too big. It's gone from 27% of our economy in the years of JFK to 37% of our economy. We have to rein in the scale of government or we're not going to be a free economy. I love this country. I spent my life in the private sector, not in government. I only spent four years as a governor. I didn't inhale. I'm a business guy. I'm going to get America working again, because I believe in the principles that make America the hope of the Earth.
Source: 2011 GOP Google debate in Orlando FL , Sep 22, 2011

1994: campaign spending limits and the abolition of PACs

During his 1994 Senate race against Ted Kennedy, Romney took a position on campaign finance reform that put him to the left of the current McCain-Feingold legislation, arguing for campaign spending limits--unconstitutional even under Buckley v. Valeo--and the abolition of PACs:

"I personally believe that when campaigns spend the kind of money they're now spending, to get that kind of money you've got to cozy up as an incumbent to all of the special-interest groups who can go out and raise money for you from their members, and that kind of relationship has an influence over the way you're going to vote. And for that reason I would like to have campaign spending limits and to say we're not going to spend more than this in certain campaigns. I also would abolish PACS. I don't like them. I don't like the influence of money--whether it's business, labor, or any other group. I do not like that kind of influence."

Source: Club for Growth 2012 Presidential White Paper #5: Romney , Jun 7, 2011

2002: publicly fund campaigns; 2008: repeal McCain-Feingold

In his 2002 gubernatorial campaign, Romney proposed a radical new campaign finance system, in which privately-funded campaigns would be taxed 10% in order to fund publicly-funded campaigns as part of Massachusetts' Clean Election Law in order to "spare taxpayers the burden of shouldering the entire expense of this program." In 2003, he allowed a repeal of the Clean Elections Law to stand.

As a presidential candidate in 2008, Mitt Romney pivoted drastically, abandoning his old anti-First Amendment stance and taking the harshest position against McCain-Feingold of all the candidates. He has called repeatedly for the legislation's repeal, and even labeled the bill "one of the worst things in my lifetime." Romney then advocated "reforms that promote transparency & disclosure, preserve grassroots activism and protect the ability to criticize or endorse current officeholders and candidates."

Source: Club for Growth 2012 Presidential White Paper #5: Romney , Jun 7, 2011

Measure American success by series of cyclical indicators

During the 1930s, economists began compiling a series of figures they hoped would predict the future direction of the American economy. Today, the Composite Index of Leading Indicators is composed of ten components, from weekly jobless claims to building permits to consumer sentiment. I believe that we could identify useful signals what would inform us of conditions that are likely to exist over a much longer time horizon, from 25 to 50 years. We might call it the Index of Leading Leading Indicators. Such an index ought to include the following indicators:
  1. The Prevalence of Freedom
  2. National Security Assessment
  3. Relative Productivity
  4. Relative GDP and Growth Rate
  5. Trade Share of the GDP
  6. Relative Market Shares in Growing, Traded-Product Industries
  7. Innovation Index
  8. National Debt and Liabilities
  9. Tax Bite (percentage of all taxes)
  10. Health-care Funding Gap
  11. Energy Burden
  12. Children Born Out of Wedlock
  13. Relative Educational Attainment
  14. Citizen Engagement
Source: No Apology, by Mitt Romney, p.282-286 , Mar 2, 2010

Dynamic regulations: forward-looking & consistently applied

Excessive regulation slows the creation of new businesses and the expansion of existing businesses. At the same time, in order to provide the structure and predictability that business needs and to protect against abuses, we need dynamic regulations, which are up-to-date, forward-looking, consistently applies, and free of unnecessary burden.

We certainly suffered from the absence of dynamic regulation in the 2008 economic collapse, particularly in the area of housing finance. While some outdated regulations had been eliminated, modern replacements had not been put in place. The wholesale failure at the federal level to revise and refine outmoded regulatory structures even as the ever-aggressive private sector sought out new profit centers allowed the risks in the system to overwhelm the collective good. We know the bill we have all paid as a result. What is odd is that some are looking to the same people in Congress as source of wisdom on how to avoid a repeat of a fiasco.

Source: No Apology, by Mitt Romney, p.138 , Mar 2, 2010

1960s large donors avoided union influence in politics

When I ran for the US Senate in 1994, I worked hard to raise the millions I would need. My father spent six months helping on the campaign. Recall that my dad was one of the most successful politicians of his era. But after seeing how much time I had to spend fund-raising, he was convinced that the system made no sense at all. In his race for governor of Michigan on 1962, he explained, his finance chairman raised all the money they would need in a single night. 15 or 20 people were invited to an event-- each check probably totaling $25,000 or more.

I asked dad whether accepting large contributions encouraged corruption; surely the contributors wanted something in return. He replied that not once during his three terms in office did one of his contributors ask for a favor. They were some of Michigan's most prominent citizens, and instead of favors, they were looking for good government. I'm not defending the old system; I'm sure it had its share of abuses. But so does the current one.

Source: No Apology, by Mitt Romney, p.274-275 , Mar 2, 2010

GovWatch: 1994: advocated spending limit on elections

Top Romney Flip Flops: #4. Campaign Finance:

In 1994, Romney advocated a spending limit on congressional elections and abolition of political action committees. In 2002, he supported public financing of campaigns from a 10 percent tax on private fund-raising. In 2008, he attacked the McCain-Feingold law limiting campaign contributions as an attack on free speech.

Source: GovWatch on 2008 campaign: “Top Ten Flip-Flops” , Feb 5, 2008

Washington thinks “action” means committee meetings & Bills

Q: I’d like your comment on this: McCain said, “I’m proud of my conservative record. It’s one of reaching across the aisle to get things done for Americans, obviously, whether it be McCain-Lieberman, that established the 9/11 Commission and then the legislation that implemented that, or whether it be working across the aisle in the Armed Services Committee, to provide the men and women with what they need to defend this nation.”

A: First of all, it’s interesting to see how Washington politicians think about action. For them, it’s reaching across aisles and committee meetings and bills. Action, where I come from, means getting the job done, actually making things better for Americans. That means getting health care for citizens. It means balancing the budget. It means cutting out wasteful spending. It means creating jobs. That’s what I’ve spent my life doing.

Source: CNN Late Edition: 2008 presidential series with Wolf Blitzer , Feb 3, 2008

Must know how America works, not just how Washington works

Q: Hillary Clinton said, “We [already] have a president who basically ran as the CEO/MBA president. Look what we got. I am not too happy about the results.” How do you respond to her & similar comments from Obama?

A: Does anyone really think that at a time when our economy is struggling, that the right course for America is to choose somebody who’s never had a job in the real economy? Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama--and Senator McCain for that matter--have spoken about all the things they do, but they’ve lived their lives in Washington. [How can] a lifelong Washington politician guide our country & build our economy, without having ever worked in the economy? You see, I think right now, it’s more important to know how America works than to know how Washington works. I think we have enough of the politicians, and it’s time to have somebody from outside Washington--like Ronald Reagan was outside Washington--go there, shake it up, get it back on the right track.

Source: CNN Late Edition: 2008 presidential series with Wolf Blitzer , Feb 3, 2008

Use my own money in a campaign to try and change the US

I’ve been successful in life, enough to be able to save enough money. I’m using that money in a campaign for a presidency to try and change this country. I’m concerned about the US my kids will inherit and their kids will inherit and the kids of the entire nation will inherit, and I want to make sure that we have a strong and vibrant nation. I happen to think that at a time like this, we need someone whose life has been in the private sector, who knows how the US works; not just how Washington works
Source: 2008 GOP debate in Boca Raton Florida , Jan 24, 2008

Not concerned about voters on his campaign self-contribution

Q: Why not tell the voters how much of your own wealth you’re spending so they can factor that into their own decision?

A: I’m not concerned about the voters. I’m much more concerned about the other guys on this stage. It’s competitive information we make sure that we use for our own benefit. I made a substantial contribution. I can’t imagine having gone to my friends and asked them to do what they’ve done, going out and raising money in my behalf, without saying I’m going to put some of my contributions behind this effort as well, because frankly, it’s important. Given the contributions I made in this race, I know I owe no one anything. I don’t have some group there that I have a special obligation to that raised money for me. I’m by far the biggest contributor to my own campaign. People can count on the fact that there’s no nobody that can call me and say, “Hey, look, you owe me,” because they don’t.

Source: 2008 GOP debate in Boca Raton Florida , Jan 24, 2008

Washington is broken due to insider lobbyists & politicians

Q: You got into a dust-up with a reporter this week over your comments that you don’t have lobbyists running your campaign while you’ve been saying that Washington is broken due to “all the politicians with all their connections with all the lobbyists that have been there for years.” You do have a lobbyist as one of your advisers, and another lobbyist is chairman of your policy committee. And lobbyists have reportedly donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to your campaign. So don’t you have close links to this very same Washington establishment that you say you’re going to shake up?

A: There’s no question in a campaign of 200 staff that you’re going to have a number who are registered lobbyists. But my campaign is run by my team from Massachusetts, and this is very definitely an outsider’s campaign. Washington fundamentally is broken, and people in this country want to see change, and that’s not going to happen by somebody who’s been there, for whom Washington is a way of life.

Source: 2008 Fox News interview: “Choosing the President” series , Jan 20, 2008

McCain-Feingold hurt our party and hurt the First Amendment

Q: Back in 2002, when McCain was campaigning for you when you were running for governor of Massachusetts, you said McCain “has always stood for reform and change, and he’s always fought the good battle, no matter what the odds.” Now you’re saying in N.H. that McCain is not an agent of change. Why have you changed your opinion?

A: Oh, I still think he’s a battler for change. He’s just been there 27 years and hasn’t been able to get the job done. He has brought some bills in place like McCain-Feingold, which hurt our party & I think hurt the First Amendment. He fought for immigration law, which I think was a terrible course, which said that all the illegal aliens that had come here illegally would be able to stay in this country forever. That was a mistake. Washington is broken. America is saying it loud and clear. You had in Iowa a number of experienced senators going up against folks that were new faces, governors, and the experienced senators lost.

Source: 2008 Fox News interview: “Choosing the President” series , Jan 6, 2008

Signing statements are an important presidential practice

Q: Under what circumstances, if any, would you sign a bill into law but also issue a signing statement reserving a constitutional right to bypass the law?

A: I share the view of many past presidents that signing statements are an important presidential practice.

Source: Boston Globe questionnaire on Executive Power , Dec 20, 2007

Focus on global Jihad, immigration, tax cut, and healthcare

I want to establish a strategy to help us overwhelm global Jihad and keep the world safe. I want to end illegal immigration. I want to end the expansion of entitlements, rein them in. I want to end the extraordinary growth in federal spending and keep our tax burden down and reduce our tax burden on middle-income families. I want to get us on a track to become energy-independent. I want to get our schools on a track so they can become competitive globally, and get health insurance for every citizen.
Source: 2007 Des Moines Register Republican Debate , Dec 12, 2007

Line-item veto can & should pass constitutional muster

Q: What about the line-item veto?

GIULIANI: The line-item veto is unconstitutional. I took Bill Clinton to the Supreme Court and beat him. It’s unconstitutional. What the heck can you do about that if you’re a strict constructionist?

ROMNEY: I’m in favor of the line-item veto. I had it, used it 844 times. I want to see Libby Dole’s line-item veto put in place. I’d have never gone to the Supreme Court and said it’s unconstitutional.

Q: Do you believe it is?

ROMNEY: I believe the line-item veto, if properly structured, passes constitutional muster. I’m in favor of the line-item veto to make sure that the president is able to help cut out pork and waste.

GIULIANI: You have to be honest with people. The line-item veto is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has ruled on it. I am in favor of a line-item veto, except you have to do it legally. If I had let Pres. Clinton take $250 million away from the people of my city illegally and unconstitutionally, I wouldn’t have been much of a mayor.

Source: 2007 Republican debate in Dearborn, Michigan , Oct 9, 2007

FactCheck: 844 line item vetoes; but over 700 overridden

Romney said, “Mayor Giuliani took the line item veto that the president had all the way to the Supreme Court and took it away from the president. I’m in favor of the line-item veto. I exercised it 844 times.”

Giuliani did challenge President Bill Clinton on the line-item veto after he used it to cut a provision that could have helped NYC’s bottom line. It was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1998. Romney is also correct to say that he exercised his state-level line-item veto power 844 times. But Romney doesn’t note that more than 700 of those vetoes were overridden by the overwhelmingly Democratic-controlled Legislature.

Source: FactCheck on 2007 Republican debate in Dearborn MI , Oct 9, 2007

FactCheck: Romney had 700 line-item vetoes, President cannot

Romney’s TV ad claims, “ I’ve vetoed hundreds of spending appropriations as governor.” However, veto overrides, it turns out, greatly outnumber the sustained vetoes.

The overrides total 707 of the more than 800 line-item vetoes that Romney issued. So while Romney did indeed veto “hundreds of spending appropriations,” as he says in the ad, he had little to show for them.

In the ad, Romney concludes, “Frankly, I can’t wait to get my hands on Washington!” If elected, however, he will find that his old job gave him more tools than the presidency. In Massachusetts, the governor can eliminate or reduce on specific line-item provisions in the budget. The so-called line-item veto allows a governor to turn down a single, particular spending measure rather than having to veto an entire bill. This is the power Romney used in his hundreds of budgetary vetoes. The president, however, does not have this authority.

Source: FactCheck's AdWatch of 2007 campaign ad, “I Like Vetoes” , Jun 28, 2007

Never pardoned anyone as governor, but might pardon Libby

Q: Should Pres. Bush pardon Scooter Libby, who was sentenced to 30 months in prison for his role in the CIA leak case?

A: This is one of those situations where I go back to my record as governor. I didn’t pardon anybody as governor because I didn’t want to overturn a jury. But in this case, you have a prosecutor who clearly abused prosecutorial discretion by going after somebody when he already knew the source of the leak. He went on a political vendetta. I’d keep the option open [for a pardon].

Source: 2007 GOP debate at Saint Anselm College , Jun 3, 2007

McCain-Feingold law prevents free speech in campaigns

Serving as a governor, I found that while the courts were making decisions that affected abortion, it’s really upon the legislature and the governor to have an impact as well. You can fight to make sure that there’s opportunities for people to express their views on this topic openly. You can fight for the opportunity to go out and campaign for the rights of those who care about this issue to be heard before Election Day, and the McCain-Feingold law prevents that from happening.
Source: 2007 GOP primary debate, at Reagan library, hosted by MSNBC , May 3, 2007

Open document policy overcame SLOC obfuscation & scandal

Our open documents policy [in response to the Olympics bid scandal] led to an avalanche of requests. There were some documents we would not share--personnel documents, and those contracts that were protected by confidentiality clauses. We also had to be careful not to undermine the ongoing investigation by the Department of Justice and the FBI. But apart from those few exceptions, we handed over everything that was requested.

It is fair to say that SLOC was the most transparent organizing committee in Olympic history--perhaps among the most publicly accessible organizations in America. The public were in attendance at every Board meeting. We built a reading room at our own expense where the public could come to examine core documents. For all intents and purposes, we were naked.

I don’t know that I would recommend such transparency for every organization. But given the scandal that had grown out of obfuscation, the only way I believe we could have restored confidence was with disclosure.

Source: Turnaround, by Mitt Romney, p.173-174 , Aug 25, 2004

Balanced budget amendment and line-item veto

Source: Boston Globe, review of 1994 campaign issues , Mar 21, 2002

Trickle-down government is not the answer

My plan has five basic parts. One, get us energy independent. That creates about 4 million jobs. #2, open up more trade, particularly in Latin America, crack down on China, if and when they cheat. #3, make sure our people have the skills they need to succeed and the best schools in the world. #4, get us to a balanced budget. #5, champion small business. Over the last four years, small- business people have decided that America may not be the place to open a new business, because new business startups are down to a 30-year low. I know what it takes to get small business growing again, to hire people.

Now, I'm concerned that the path that we're on has just been unsuccessful. The president has a view very similar to the view he had when he ran four years, that a bigger government, spending more, taxing more, regulating more--if you will, trickle-down government--would work. That's not the right answer for America. I'll restore the vitality that gets America working again.

Source: First Obama-Romney 2012 Presidential debate , Oct 3, 2012

CC:Appoint strict Constitutionalist judges.

Romney supports the CC survey question on judicial constitutionalism

The Christian Coalition Voter Guide inferred whether candidates agree or disagree with the statement, 'Appointing Judges Who Will Adhere to a Strict Interpretation of the Constitution' Christian Coalition's self-description: "Christian Voter Guide is a clearing-house for traditional, pro-family voter guides. We do not create voter guides, nor do we interview or endorse candidates."

Source: Christian Coalition Surve 18CC-1a on Jul 1, 2018

Remove President Trump from office for inciting insurrection.

Romney voted YEA removing President Trump from office for inciting insurrection

GovTrack.us summary of H.Res.24: Article of Impeachment Against Former President Donald John Trump:

The House impeached President Trump for the second time, charging him with incitement of insurrection. The impeachment resolution accused the President of inciting the violent riot that occurred on January 6, when his supporters invaded the United States Capitol injuring and killing Capitol Police and endangering the safety of members of Congress. It cites statements from President Trump to the rioters such as `if you don't fight like hell you're not going to have a country anymore,` as well as persistent lies that he won the 2020 Presidential election.

Legislative Outcome:

Bill introduced Jan 11, 2021, with 217 co-sponsors; House rollcall vote #117 passed 232-197-4 on Jan. 13th (a YES vote in the House was to impeach President Trump for inciting insurrection); Senate rollcall vote #59 rejected 57-43-0 on Feb. 13th (2/3 required in Senate to pass; a YES vote in the Senate would have found President Trump guilty, but since he had already left office at that time, a guilty verdict would have barred Trump from running for President in the future)

Source: Congressional vote 21-HR24S on Jan 11, 2021

Mixed vote on two articles of impeachment against Trump.

Romney opposes Impeachment of President Trump

RESOLUTION: Impeaching Donald Trump for high crimes and misdemeanors.

    ARTICLE I: ABUSE OF POWER: Using the powers of his high office, Pres. Trump solicited the interference of a foreign government, Ukraine, in the 2020 US Presidential election. He did so through a course of conduct that included
  1. Pres. Trump--acting both directly and through his agents--corruptly solicited the Government of Ukraine to publicly announce investigations into a political opponent, former Vice President Joseph Biden; and a discredited theory promoted by Russia alleging that Ukraine--rather than Russia--interfered in the 2016 US Presidential election.
  2. With the same corrupt motives, Pres. Trump conditioned two official acts on the public announcements that he had requested: (A) the release of $391 million that Congress had appropriated for the purpose of providing vital military and security assistance to Ukraine to oppose Russian aggression; and (B) a head of state meeting at the White House, which the President of Ukraine sought.
  3. Faced with the public revelation of his actions, Pres. Trump ultimately released the [funds] to the Government of Ukraine, but has persisted in openly soliciting Ukraine to undertake investigations for his personal political benefit.
These actions were consistent with Pres. Trump's previous invitations of foreign interference in US elections.
    ARTICLE II: OBSTRUCTION OF CONGRESS:
  1. Pres. Trump defied a lawful subpoena by withholding the production of documents sought [by Congress];
  2. defied lawful subpoenas [for] the production of documents and records;
  3. and directed current and former Executive Branch officials not to cooperate with the Committees.
These actions were consistent with Pres. Trump's previous efforts to undermine US Government investigations into foreign interference in US elections.
Source: H.R.755 ImpeachK on Dec 18, 2019

Other candidates on Government Reform: Mitt Romney on other issues:
MA Gubernatorial:
Ben Downing
Bill Weld
Bob Massie
Charlie Baker
Dan Wolf
Danielle Allen
Deval Patrick
Don Berwick
Geoff Diehl
Jay Gonzalez
Jesse Gordon
Karyn Polito
Lawrence Lessig
Martha Coakley
Marty Walsh
Richard Tisei
Seth Moulton
Setti Warren
Shiva Ayyadurai
Sonia Chang-Diaz
Steve Grossman
Tom Menino
Warren Tolman
MA Senatorial:
Beth Lindstrom
Ed Markey
Elizabeth Warren
Geoff Diehl
Heidi Wellman
Joe Kennedy III
John Kingston
Kevin O`Connor
Shannon Liss-Riordan
Shiva Ayyadurai

MA politicians
MA Archives
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vs.Tim Shepard(D) vs.Billy Long(R)
NC: Incumbent Richard Burr(R,retiring)
Erica Smith(D) vs.Mark Walker(R)
vs.Ted Budd(R) vs.Pat McCrory(R)
vs.Cheri Beasley(D) vs.Rett Newton(D)
vs.Jeff Jackson(D) vs.Marjorie K. Eastman(R)
ND: Incumbent John Hoeven(R)
vs.Michael J. Steele(D)
NH: Incumbent Maggie Hassan(D)
vs.Don Bolduc(R)
vs.Chris Sununu(R ?)
NV: Incumbent Catherine Cortez Masto(D)
vs.Adam Laxalt(R)
NY: Incumbent Chuck Schumer(D)
vs.Antoine Tucker(R)
OH: Incumbent Rob Portman(R,retiring)
Bernie Moreno(R) vs.Tim Ryan(D)
vs.Jane Timken(R) vs.Josh Mandel(R)
vs.JD Vance(R) vs.Mike Gibbons(R)
vs.Morgan Harper(D) vs.Matt Dolan(R)
OK: Incumbent James Lankford(R)
vs.Nathan Dahm(R)
vs.Joan Farr(R)
OR: Incumbent Ron Wyden(D)
vs.QAnon adherent Jo Rae Perkins(R)
vs.Jason Beebe(R)
PA: Incumbent Pat Toomey(R,retiring)
vs.Everett Stern(R) vs.Jeff Bartos(R)
vs.Val Arkoosh(D) vs.Carla Sands(R)
vs.John Fetterman(D) vs.Malcolm Kenyatta(D)
vs.Kathy Barnette(R) vs.Sharif Street(D)
vs.Conor Lamb(D) vs.Sean Parnell(R)
vs.Craig Snyder(R) vs.Mehmet Oz(R)
SC: Incumbent Tim Scott(R)
vs.State Rep. Krystle Matthews(D)
SD: Incumbent John Thune(R)
vs.State Rep. Billie Sutton(? D)
UT: Incumbent Mike Lee(R) vs.Allen Glines(D)
vs.Austin Searle(D) vs.Evan McMullin(I)
VT: Incumbent Patrick Leahy(D)
vs.Scott Milne(? R)
vs.Peter Welch(D)
WA: Incumbent Patty Murray(D)
vs.Challenger Tiffany Smiley(R)
WI: Incumbent Ron Johnson(R) vs.Tom Nelson(D)
vs.Sarah Godlewski(D) vs.Alex Lasry(D)
vs.Chris Larson(D) vs.Mandela Barnes(D)
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Energy/Oil
Environment
Families
Foreign Policy
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Gun Control
Health Care
Homeland Security
Immigration
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Social Security
Tax Reform
Technology
War/Peace
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Other Senators
Senate Votes (analysis)
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Contact info:
Campaign website:
www.mittromney.com/
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 55239, Boston, MA 02205





Page last updated: Dec 28, 2021