Saturday, March 17, 2007

Romney's words grow hard on immigration

PHOENIX -- When Mitt Romney swooped into the heart of John McCain country this week, he brought a pointed message on illegal immigration: McCain's approach is the wrong one.

Proudly touting the endorsement of Joe Arpaio, a sheriff in the state who is known nationally for rounding up immigrants in desert tents, Romney boasted of cracking down on illegal immigrants as governor and denounced an immigration bill that the Arizona senator introduced with Senator Edward M. Kennedy in 2005.

It is a theme Romney has hit hard in recent weeks in his appeals to conservatives, many of whom attack McCain's immigration bill for proposing an eventual path to citizenship for immigrants living illegally in the United States and a guest-worker program to help fill American jobs.

"McCain-Kennedy isn't the answer," Romney said in a well-received speech to conservatives in Washington this month, describing it as an amnesty plan that would reward people for breaking the law and cost taxpayers millions to provide them benefits.

But that is markedly different from how Romney once characterized McCain's bill, elements of which are receiving new attention in Congress and from President Bush. Indeed, Romney's past comments on illegal immigration suggest his views have hardened as he has ramped up his campaign for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Romney birthday highlights age difference in GOP nomination race

By Associated Press
Monday, March 12, 2007 - Updated: 05:33 AM EST

BOSTON - Mitt Romney turns 60 on today, a personal milestone but also a line of demarcation in the unfolding race for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination.

While the birthday moves the former Massachusetts governor closer to the senior set, it leaves him a relative fountain of youth compared to another leading contender for the GOP nomination.

At 70, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is the oldest major candidate in either the Democratic or Republican primaries. The current GOP front-runner, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, is 63, while the youngest candidate from either party is Democrat Barack Obama. The Illinois senator is 45.

If McCain were elected president, he would be the oldest person ever to assume the presidency. He would be 72 at his inauguration, 76 if he won a second term, and 80 by the time he completed it.

Neither Romney nor Giuliani has overtly exploited McCain’s age, but it remains a sensitive subject within the senator’s campaign. McCain is a bona fide war hero, but he also cannot raise his arms over his head because of the torture he suffered as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, and his face bears scars from past bouts with skin cancer.

”I think we’re expecting people to run for president in their 50s and 60s,” said presidential historian Joan Hoff, a Montana State University professor and former head of the Center for the Study of the Presidency in New York.

”By that time, they’ve had other life experiences that make people think they’re seasoned and experienced. McCain is past that mark, and by the same token, age may be a factor against Barack Obama, although a lot of other things go along with his age, including his relative lack of experience,” Hoff said.

McCain himself cringed during a Feb. 28 interview with comedian David Letterman, when the talk-show host spent the opening minutes of a conversation with the senator forcing him to talk about his 70th birthday _ back on Aug. 29.

Similarly, Rick Davis, one of McCain’s top political advisers, grew exasperated this past week when a moderator at a Harvard University forum in which he was participating made note of McCain’s age.

Davis went on to note that McCain was particularly popular with younger voters during his first presidential campaign in 2000, despite being 63 at the time.

Age played a role in the 1960 campaign between Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon.

”In 1960, John Kennedy was able to get away with casting himself as part of a ’new generation’ even though Richard Nixon was only four years older than him,” Hoff said.

Age also resurfaced in 1984, when President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, was being challenged for re-election by Democrat Walter Mondale.

Reagan was the oldest president to hold office. He was 69 at his first inauguration in 1981, 73 at his second inauguration in 1985 and 77 when he left office. After his death in 2004 of complications from Alzheimer’s disease, there were questions about whether he was already suffering from the mind-dimming affliction before he left the White House.

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