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Khatami Re-hashed: Hypocrisy of the mainstream media and liberal academic bastions (e.g. Harvard)

September 14th, 2006 · No Comments

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=YzhiOWIyNmJiMzA3NGU5NTYzZTAxNzdiYTY0N2VkMTg Well, the mainstream media (MSM) . . . this time in the form of the Associated Press . . . is absolutely nuts. They sent this “Khatami Love Letter” across the wire earlier today praising the visit of this “moderate Islamic leader.” The article was titled “Former Iranian president’s tour offers moderate vision of Iran” by MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN. His rosy take on Khatami’s visit is effusive:

Iran’s former President Mohammed Khatami could be found munching seared salmon and Caesar salad last weekend with Harvard professors on the last leg of a five-city U.S. tour.

In speeches, interviews and meetings with foreign policy groups, Khatami offered a moderate take on relations between East and West that focused on nonviolence, discussion and mutual understanding

The other side of the coin can be seen here:
(Hat tip to Bala Ambati . . . one of my mentors during residency and a real life genius/Doogie Howser . . . became an M.D. at age 17. He also blogs some here). This editorial at NRO by a former Iranian (who probably knows a bit more about Iranian life and politics than your average AP writer). IN his editorial “Good Cop, Bad Cop: Don’t be fooled by Khatami” he said:

The U.S. decision to enable former Iranian President Muhammad Khatami to visit Washington to discuss “Civilization and Tolerance” is an unfortunate reflection of the Bush administration’s continuing confusion about Iran.

The Islamic Republic has convinced successive U.S. administrations that there is a dichotomy in Iran between reformers and hardliners and that, if only Washington would engage the former, they might nudge Tehran toward moderation. There is a dichotomy in Iran, but U.S. officials constantly get the sides wrong. The division within Iranian society is not between hardliners and reformers, but rather between regime and the population.

The Islamic Republic is neither democratic nor capable of reform. This fact is inherent in its constitution. Reform can occur only if unelected officials and the Supreme Leader agrees. It is unlikely that he would ever agree to a reduction of his power. So-called moderates may talk about cosmetic changes, but they neither oppose the theocracy nor the export of revolution.

The White House should not be fooled. The visit from Khatami is the latest reflection of the Islamic Republic’s “good cop, bad cop” strategy.The idea is that while President Mahmud Ahmadinejad speaks about “wiping Israel and the United States off of the map”; Washington should seek dialog with more “moderate” former president Khatami. It is meant to buy time. Unfortunately, the State Department has once again taken the bait.

Khatami portrayed himself for eight years as a “reformist.” During this time, he built up the nuclear program that is now threatening global peace. Khatami and his administration are responsible for the murders of opposition leaders and their families, the crushing of the student rebellions, and the disappearance of many journalists.

I encourage you to go and read the whole thing.

So, who’s right, the AP writer or the Iranian editorialist? Is Khatami a real moderate? Or is he a “wolve in sheeps clothing” as Romney said? As I’m getting used to concluding . . . Romney’s right again.

At the University of Virginia Katami slammed Bush:

Just before heading to Washington, Khatami also took a veiled swipe at President Bush in a speech at the University of Virginia. He didn’t name names, but he left little doubt that one of his barbs was aimed at Bush.

“The rationale whereby the world is divided into `us and them,’ the justification of `us’ is contingent upon the negation of the other and results in statements such as `whomever is not with us is against us,’” Khatami said. “This `us’ is a small circle encompassing a few that have the right to arrive at any verdict they please regarding the ones they consider `the other.’ They can force this `other’ to submit to their whims or even eliminate `the other’ altogether.”

Fortunately, the Harvard student newspaper the Harvard Crimson gave us some actual details of Khatami’s words and themes during his 30 minute speech at the Kennedy School of (BIG) Government. The article was titled “Khatami Slams ‘Imperial’ U.S.: To polite audience, controversial cleric defends execution of homosexuals”

In his 30-minute address under heavy security, the Muslim cleric also defended the militant Lebanese group Hezbollah as a legitimate resistance movement fighting for the “territorial integrity” of Lebanon.

. . .

Khatami did not directly apologize for Iran’s human rights abuses.

. . .

But he condemned America for acquiring “imperialist” and “colonialist” aspirations, saying it must not fall into a sense of “false pride.”

“In all honesty, the West needs spirituality more than ever before in its history,” Khatami said.

Oh, so like maybe we all just need to become jihadists converts? What hypocrisy . . . if only we had the spiritual enlightenment that has made all Islamic nations so peaceful and unagressive. This is a religion founded by one of the most imperialist leaders in history!

Later we hear Khatami answer a question about Islamic (and Iranian) laws calling for execution for those performing acts of homosexuality:

“Homosexuality is a crime in Islam and crimes are punishable,” Khatami said. “And the fact that a crime could be punished by execution is debatable.”

This last statement is the kind of thinking that makes Khatami a “moderate” in the eyes of the liberal MSM . . . that he’s willing to debate whether or not homosexual acts should be punishible by death, or just life in prision or deportation. Sound like a “moderate” stance to you?

Another source covering Khatami’s speech quoted him as saying that . . .

American politicians, since World War II, have been infatuated with “world domination.”

Providing a stark contrast to who these left-wing nut-jobs think the real terrorists are we can thank, again, the Harvard Crimson’s reporting. This is what the folks protesting the presence of Dick Cheney at a GOP fundraiser in Boston on Sept 8th, 2006:

“It’s the equivalent of Hitler coming back to life and coming to Boston,” said Nick Giannone of Quincy, Mass. “This guy’s a straight-up fascist. I also find it pretty appalling that someone would pay $2,500 to sit in a room with a war criminal.”

Suren Moodliar of the Greater Boston Stop the Wars Coalition expressed distaste for Cheney’s ability to raise money: “I am appalled that he can go around raising money now that the party and he, in particular, have demonstrated to be so morally bankrupt.”

. . .

the group of approximately 200 hundred gathered a block down from the crimson and white flowerbeds of the club’s entrance. Protestors screamed, “Shame on you!” and “Murderers!” to those making their way to the fundraiser.

. . .

The crowd waved signs calling Cheney a “demon” and chanted, “Cheney, Cheney’s got to go! Send him to Guantanamo!” Three men dressed in jailhouse stripes and wearing Bush, Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld masks mugged for passerby. A group of self-proclaimed ‘Billionaires for Bush and Cheney,’ dressed to the nines, serenaded the crowd: “All we are saying is give greed a chance!”

Something’s telling me that these protestors were not the same orderly and respectful crowd that protested Khatami’s record/presence at Harvard a couple of days later.

Why does Khatami get respectful consideration while Harvard students in the past have booed conservative speakers and protested President Reagan’s plans to speak at Harvard’s 350th anniversary? Gotta make ya wonder, eh?

Jeff

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Tags: Diversity · Immigration · National Security

Alabama for Romney Up & “Tar Baby” Still Stickin (in people’s minds)

August 29th, 2006 · No Comments

http://alabamaforromney.blogspot.com/ Romney state blogs can now start the alphabetical list off right! Karl Basham, who has recently helped re-vitalize Mississippi for Mitt, has started “Alabama for Romney” and has several excellent new posts in the last few days. Karl is a Captain (soon to make Major) in the Air Force and is going in less than two weeks for a 6 month deployment in Iraq.

Speaking of Alabama, I ran into an article titled “ALABAMA VOICES: Word thieves threaten richness of language” from the Montgomery Advertiser by Tom Fitzpatrick. It only mentions Romney periperally, but the writer laments that a literary rich term like “tar baby” has been hijacked by race-baiters and will become taboo in our vocabluary as a racial slur. This topic is near and dear to me, because, as many readers here may know, I asked the question to Romney at the Ames event last month that elicited his “tar baby” comment.

Fitzpatrick delves into an interesting history of the orgin of the term and laments about its apparent sailing into the sunset. Of Romney, the story mentions:

Gov. Romney referred to the Boston “Big Dig” tunnel fiasco as a tar baby he didn’t want to touch. Sounds apt, but critics across the nation, led by black activists, savaged him. Romney apparently didn’t know that “tar baby” in recent years has become a racist’s epithet for a black person.

Personally, I think it will be a disgrace and loss to both blacks and whites if “tar baby” is allowed to be pirated by word thieves, goes the way of “gay” and “intercourse,” and lives on bereft of its original meaning.

Well said Mr. Fitzpatrick!

Look at all the debate my simple question led to . . . who would’ve thunk it . . .

Jeff

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Tags: Big Dig · Blogosphere · By State · Diversity

Romney’s Judicial Appointments and Philosophy: No, it’s not the “pro-gay rights”, “pro-activist judges” picture painted by some

August 27th, 2006 · No Comments

What I’ve created below is in response to a commonly recurring attack on Romney: that he can’t be trusted to appoint good conservative/constructionist judges because of his record of judicial appointees as Massachusetts Governor, specifically regarding gay-activist judges.

The issue came up in a discussion thread to an article I posted on Free Republic (Over 135 comments so far, and some heated debate). One comment (#123), by JohnnyZ summed up the most common attack:

Romney’s record on judges is perhaps the most atrocious part of his political record.

He has nominated not one but TWO homosexual liberal Democrat gay marriage activists as judges in Massachusetts. Most of his judicial nominations have been Democrats. There are no reported instances of Mitt fighting for more conservative judges in Massachusetts. By all accounts the liberal Democrats who must approve his picks have had no complaints with his selections. (That’s a good indication he’s not doing his job right!!!)

I wouldn’t put anything past a flip-flopper like Romney, but going from nominating pro-gay marriage activist Democrats, who are openly homosexual themselves, to nominating conservative justices for the Supreme Court — well, really, it does strain credulity.

Romney has also been attacked on Red State (Usually by Gary Glenn) several times on this issue and it will be a recurring mantra for those trying to discredit Romney on the issue of abortion (since SCOTUS nominees represent the greatest influence a POTUS can have on the abortion issue).

Governor Romney has been criticized by some conservatives for not appointing enough Republican judges. As you read this, I think you’ll come to understand that Romney has done an excellent job on judicial appointees, has been pragmatic, and has navigated the liberal waters of Massachusetts politics better than one would have expected. Hopefully, this piece, in combination with Nathan Burd’s excellent piece “A Pro-Life Perspective on a Mitt Romney Presidency” can act as resources for Romney supporters wanting to “clear the air” when Romney is incorrectly criticized on these points.

Much of what follows comes from a Boston Globe article from July 2005. I have “sterilized” out much of the anti-Romney slant that we’ve all come to expect out of that left-leaning rag (but you can go to the link and read it all).

As of one year ago Romney had nominated 9 Republicans and 14 Democrats as judicial appointees (and a host of “unenrolled” appointees) . . . this in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans nearly 4-1 and the legislature is 87% Democrats. Sounds like Romney is beating the statistics there! But what is impressive, is that for Romney, it’s not just about playing politics with judicial appointees. The article states:

With increased attention on judicial nominees after President Bush’s nomination of John G. Roberts Jr. to the US Supreme Court, Romney said Friday that he has not paid a moment’s notice to his nominees’ political leanings or sexual orientation — or to the impact his choices might have on a future presidential run. He said he has focused on two factors: their legal experience and whether the nominees would be tough on crime. He said most of the nominees have prosecutorial experience.

The governor said that, so far, he has had few chances to appoint judges to the highest state courts, where his criteria would change to include ‘’strict construction, judicial philosophy.”

”With regards to those at the district court and clerk magistrate level, their political views aren’t really going to come into play unless their views indicate they will be soft on crime, because in that case, apply elsewhere,” Romney said.

The above is a key point. Ziuko on Red State commented: “If Federal courts are the major leagues, state [and district] courts aren’t even the minor leagues, they’re a pick up game of tee ball. Having the right connections seems to be about the only important attribute for any candidate. Judicial philosophy never seems to enter into it.”

So, I would ask what the big hullabaloo is about Romney’s appointments (the two that had a history of gay activism OUTSIDE of the courtroom)? Who gives a rip if a small-time criminal court judge is gay!?!–especially if they have a judicial record of being tough on crime and are working in criminal courts!

Romney won praise in the legal community when he replaced regional judicial nominating committees that were viewed as politically tainted with a centralized Judicial Nominating Commission. The commission considers applicants using a ”blind” first phase of the selection process that removes names from applications in an attempt to ensure the candidates will be judged on their merits. In addition, all of Romney’s nominees have been submitted to a Joint Bar Committee on Judicial Nominations, which rates candidates as qualified, well-qualified, or unqualified — and each has been found to be either qualified or well-qualified.

As a Harvard Law cum laude graduate, Romney obviously knows a thing or two about proper qualifications for a good judge . . . not one that he’s recommended has been considered “unqualified.”

The BG article continues:

there is evidence to suggest that Romney is making sure his fellow Republicans and conservatives get a piece of the action.

Romney has faced criticism from Governor’s Councilors and some bar associations for failing to nominate more women, minorities, and defense attorneys to the bench. Seeking to counter such attacks, Romney’s appointee to the chairmanship of the Judicial Nominating Commission, Boston lawyer Christopher D. Moore, has reached out to minority and women’s bar associations to encourage members to apply. He’s done the same with the state lesbian and gay bar association, which also has a seat on Romney’s joint bar committee.

Later, some more about Moore:

Romney’s choice to chair the Judicial Nomination Commission, Moore, is a member of the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group that fights ”judicial activism” and promotes the legal system as the preeminent venue for protecting ”traditional values.”

Then comes one of the “kickers” . . . seeing who Romney has to get his nominees passed through:

After Romney nominates the candidate, the pick must be approved by the Governor’s Council , where Democrats hold eight of nine seats [all of them elected officials . . . not Romney appointments see here]. . .

”He’s tried to have a process devoid of politics, [but] he also has to get his nominees approved by the Governor’s Council, and that is not a bipartisan body,” said Jones, of Reading. ”The biggest problem in trying to reform the system to make it devoid of politics is that not everyone else buys into that model.”

Romney, asked if he has engaged in any horse-trading with Democratic politicians, said: ”So far I have not ever given any weight whatsoever to whether I think someone can make it through the Governor’s Council. I send them individuals who I feel are highly qualified and have the right judicial temperament related to crime and punishment

But what about higher level appointees?

Peter Vickery, one of the Democrats on the Governor’s Council, says he believes Romney and Moore would seek far more conservative jurists if a vacancy were to pop up on the Supreme Judicial Court, which delivered the gay marriage decision that Romney has routinely blasted.

Some of Romney’s nominees do have stellar Republican or conservative bona fides. For example, Romney’s pick for Peabody clerk magistrate, Kevin L. Finnegan, is a former two-term Republican state representative. Another choice was Bruce R. Henry, the son-in-law of former SJC Justice Joseph Nolan — whom Romney wanted to represent his administration in seeking a stay of the court’s gay marriage ruling.

Taking another angle altogether . . . Romney recently refused to re-appoint David Gorton, the former Commissioner on the Appellate Tax Board (a panel of five judges), in part because of his questionable ethics and his outspoken gay activism negatively influencing his job performance. According to this article: “I won’t rule out homophobia,” said Gorton, who has been a gay rights activist and community leader. From 1988 to 1994, Gorton served as chair of the Greater Boston Gay &Lesbian Political Alliance.

Currently, he is on the board of directors for The Gay & Lesbian Review, serving as its clerk.

The rub for Romney, Gordon believes, stems from the governor’s presidential ambitions. “The religious right hates gay activists with a passion, and I am the kind of guy who would raise red flags,” Gorton said. “Although I am a judge on the job and an activist on the side, I fit their stereotype of ‘activist judge.’”

Although no gay-marriage tax cases have yet to come before the board, Gorton believes it is only a matter of time before they will. Gorton, who has served on the board for more than nine years, has expertise and experience with both kinds of appeals.

Looks like a position where a gay activist could negatively swing decisions/opinions. HUGE RED FLAG!! Fortunately, Romney had the sense to not re-appoint him.

Therefore, does Romney get credit for taking away one gay activist judge? Will this subtract out either of the two that the anti-Romney conservatives are complaining about? I’m guessing they’ll choose to ignore that piece of history.

JohnnyZ said that Romney appointed “TWO homosexual liberal Democrat gay marriage activists”

Well, lets look at these appointees in more depth. First is Stephen S. Abany who was appointed to district court(as an “Associate Justice,” the lowest rung at the district court level) . . . first off, it turns out that he IS NOT a registered Democrat (so JohnnyZ was wrong again . . . no surprise there I guess, I’m getting quite used to it) but his leanings and voting are generally liberal (AKA Democratic). Abany was 57 years old when he was appointed to a DISTRICT Court . . . not even a remote threat to rise up through the judicial system to become a Supreme Court caliber appointee.

The other appointee JohnnyZ refers to isn’t even homosexual (as far as anyone has publicly claimed). Marianne C. Hinkle, a longtime state and federal prosecutor (and VERY TOUGH ON CRIME), was the another nominee in question. She’s a Democrat and a member of a group that tries to promote gay rights in the Catholic church but has no record of judicial/courtroom activism. She was appointed at the same “lowest rung” at the District Court level as Abany and she was similarly in her late 50’s when appointed.

This Romney guys knows what he’s doing. He has been pragmatic and wise in his appointments given the environment he works in.

Also, Romney has been a long-time and outspoken opponent of activist judges. He has tight ties with the Federalist Society and his private charity group has donated to it (liberals have criticized this before). What follows now is some of Romney’s extensive record of being against activist judges and on coming down on the conservative side of court decisions:

These Boston Globe piece excerpts help show that Romney is on the right side of the judicial activism issue:

WASHINGTON — Governor Mitt Romney leveled an unusually personal attack yesterday at the Supreme Judicial Court for legalizing same-sex marriage in Massachusetts, telling a group of conservative lawyers and judges that the justices issued the ruling to promote their values and those of ”their like-minded friends in the communities they socialize in.”

Though Romney has criticized the SJC’s watershed 2003 decision many times before, the broadside he delivered at the Federalist Society’s National Lawyers Convention in Washington, D.C., was an atypically sharp and direct attack on the four justices who found that the Massachusetts Constitution afforded gays and lesbians the right to marry.

”If a judge substitutes his or her values for those values that were placed in the constitution, they do so at great peril to the culture of our entire land,” he said.

The remarks won applause from the 500 lawyers, scholars, and others who packed a ballroom to hear Romney’s speech.

. . .

Romney ended his speech by praising the new chief justice of the Supreme Court, John Roberts, and President Bush’s current pick to replace outgoing Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Samuel A. Alito Jr.

Several Federalist Society members said afterward that they were impressed by what they heard from Romney. ”I think he said the right thing: Decisions should be left to the people,” said Peter Urbanowicz, a Dallas lawyer.

And quotes back from 2004 from another piece:

Romney: ”Beware of activist judges. The Legislature is our lawmaking body, and it is the Legislature’s job to pass laws. . . . While the law protects states from being forced to recognize gay marriage, activist state courts could reach a different conclusion, just as ours did. It would be disruptive and confusing to have a patchwork of inconsistent marriage laws between states. Amending the Constitution may be the best and most reliable way to prevent such confusion and preserve the institution of marriage.” (Wall Street Journal op-ed, Feb. 5, 2004)

Romney: ”The real threat to the states is not the constitutional amendment process, in which the states participate, but activist judges who disregard the law and redefine marriage in order to impose their will on the states, and on the whole nation. At this point, the only way to reestablish the status quo ante is to preserve the definition of marriage in the federal Constitution before courts redefine it out of existence.” (Testimony to Senate Judiciary Committee, June 22, 2004)

Even earlier that year he wrote a powerful opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal called “One Man, One Woman: A citizen’s guide to protecting marriage”

Beware of activist judges. The Legislature is our lawmaking body, and it is the Legislature’s job to pass laws. As governor, it is my job to carry out the laws. The Supreme Judicial Court decides cases where there is a dispute as to the meaning of the laws or the constitution. This is not simply a separation of the branches of government, it is also a balance of powers: One branch is not to do the work of the other. It is not the job of judges to make laws, the job of legislators to command the National Guard, or my job to resolve litigation between citizens. If the powers were not separated this way, an official could make the laws, enforce them, and stop court challenges to them. No one branch or person should have that kind of power. It is inconsistent with a constitutional democracy that guarantees to the people the ultimate power to control their government.

With the Dred Scott case, decided four years before he took office, President Lincoln faced a judicial decision that he believed was terribly wrong and badly misinterpreted the U.S. Constitution. Here is what Lincoln said: “If the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.” By its decision, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts circumvented the Legislature and the executive, and assumed to itself the power of legislating. That’s wrong.

Yet another quote:
”He’s trying to get candidates who are conservative and probusiness and who have a prosecutorial background, tough on crime, and to use the words that have been flying around for a few years, he doesn’t want any of those activist judges on the bench,” said Kathleen M. O’Donnell, past president of the Massachusetts Bar Association.

From the Christian Broadcasting Network:

“As governor, all of the issues that have come to my desk that have dealt with the matter of abortion, I have decided on the side of life,” Romney said.

The pro-life Romney now seems to have the entire social conservative values package. He is also not pleased with activist judges and supports the push for a constitutional amendment protecting traditional marriage.

“The idea of not allowing ‘Under GodÂ’ in the Pledge of Allegiance or taking ‘In God we trustÂ’ off our coins – those are just nutty,” Romney said.

While in Georgia recently Romney said of the Gitmo ruling:

Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts said Thursday that the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Guantanamo Bay detainees was just another reason why the nation should elect a Republican president again in 2008 _ to get more conservative judges on the high court.

The Supreme Court ruled that President Bush overstepped his authority in ordering military war crimes trials for Guantanamo Bay detainees, saying in a strong rebuke that the trials were illegal under U.S. and international law.

The court declared 5-3 that the trials for 10 foreign terror suspects violate U.S. law and the Geneva conventions.

“To apply the Geneva accords is very strange in my view,”

On Eminent Domain Ruling (part of this is from the Hugh Hewitt show):
HH: Last question, Governor. Today, the Supreme Court upheld a extraordinary exercise of eminent domain on private property for transfer to other private property. Are you surprised by this? Does it alarm you?

MR: You know, the Supreme Court made an error in judgment on this one. You know, I understand the purpose of eminent domain, to make sure that when roads need to be built, or public purposes are involved, that private property can be taken when there’s fair compensation. But to basically say a mall developer could get eminent domain to take away peoples’ homes, that is not a good idea. The liberals on the Court made a mistake on this, and we’re going to have to get a Court that’s willing to stand by the rights of property owners

Obviously, Romney’s pragmatism will continue to turn off some ultra-conservatives and they will continue to label him as a RINO or some other derogatory label. But many of their attacks are either dishonest or flat out wrong and need to be combated.

Are there more conservative politicians out there? Sure.

Can any of them make a serious run at winning the presidency? Not looking like it now.

Can any of them lead as effectively as Romney could? I highly doubt it.

Romney’s record of judicial appointees is not worrisome to this Reagan Republican.

I look forward to a potential President Romney nominating constructionist and qualified individuals to the SCOTUS, just like he has said he would. One thing you’d be hard pressed to attack Romney on is his record of keeping campaign promises. He has been a man, and politician, of his word–truly a rare gem in our country today.

Jeff

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Tags: Culture · Diversity · Legal and Judicial · Massachusetts · Morality

Diversity

August 21st, 2006 · No Comments

http://illinisans-4-mitt-romney.blogspot.com/2006/08/diversity.html I have tried to find the Governor Mitt Romney Press Releases about diversity. Please help me find new stuff!

“My Administration is committed to assembling a state government workforce that reflects the fabric of our community,” Romney said. “We will work hard to ensure that our Administration recruits and retains talented individuals from all backgrounds at every level of government.” Source: 06- 17-2003 Press Reelase

Romney thanked the members of the council, from both the public and private sectors, for serving his Administration in this important role. “With the help of the council members, my Administration will work hard to foster a culture of inclusion that values diversity. We want Massachusetts to be recognized as a great place for people from all backgrounds to work and raise a family.” Source: 09-26-2003 Press Release

“One of the hallmarks of good government is making sure that everyone has a seat at the table. In this administration, diversity’s not a slogan - it’s a fact,” said Romney.

2003

06- 17-2003, ROMNEY CREATES OFFICE OF DIVERSITY AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
09-26-2003, ROMNEY NAMES DIVERSITY AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COUNCIL

2004

2005
07-20-2005, ROMNEY APPOINTS LATINO-AMERICAN ADVISORY COMMISSION

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Tags: 2008 · Diversity