Romney: Dubya in Centrist's Clothing Compassionate- conservative act just that, columnist writes By Jonas Oransky Posted Aug 23, 2007 6:36 PM CDT Copied Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, speaks to a group of supporters during a town hall meeting in Winter Park, Fla., Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2007. (AP Photo/John Raoux) (Associated Press) Mitt Romney’s centrist past and anti-bigot pleasantries are belied by the hardcore conservative base he’s building, writes the American Prospect’s Garance Franke-Ruta. The Republican presidential hopeful's overtures to the middle echo those of George W. Bush's 2000 campaign—in which Bush ultimately won by relying on his social conservative base. Liberals shouldn’t be fooled, says Franke-Ruta, by Romney’s credentials as ex-governor of left-leaning Massachusetts: His desire to “double Guantanamo” is closer to the mark. No politician elected by such a conservative base could truly buck it, so Dems should stop calling him “the least bad Republican contender”—and look at the dreams of those who want him in office. Read These Next China's ambitious man-made island is now 'a dead zone.' The Blind Side actor is reportedly 'on life support.' Oh, the horrors of a door-less bathroom. Marjorie Taylor Greene raises a warning to MAGA about civil war. Report an error