Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Why Mitt Romney should be our next Commander-In-Chief

(Brandon Brice-hiphoprepublican).In the era of Obama, America has taken a major step forward by electing an African American as our current Commander-in-Chief. So what America has proven is that anyone can be elected, despite race, background, creed or religion. So what about a Mormon?

The fact can be the same for Romney who exeplifies everything that is supposed to be “American”, the emphasizes on family, service, sobriety, hard work, innovation, emphasis for a strong military defense and supporting a healthcare plan that actually works and is affordable. However, Mitt Romney will have to make the average American voter comfortable with his religion, addressing the issues of the past and exposing the United States to a religion that has remained silent for many years to the genenral public.

What’s interesting is that 2012 will remove the religion question off table,So if the religion question is removed off the table, then what’s left for the American voter to evaluate; appearance and substance of merit.

Romney understands that the average American want’s a person of faith to lead the United States, but more important someone who cares about the issues and is able to fix the problem.

Just looking at Romeny’s track record as someone who fixed Massachusett’s healthcare problem in a democratic majority in the Massachusetts legislature is an accomplishment alone. Romney, as a Republican, became the Governor of the most liberal state in America.

Americans has become more tolerant of our elected officials, as the dynamics of america is changing. America should be a nation of innovation and diversity, granting opportunities for all races and religious creeds. In 2008, the United States took a chance by voting in a black man to the highest office in the land, the next challenge in 2012 will be for the United States to vote it’s first Mormon in the highest seat in the land. As a republican strategist who see’s the potential in Romney’s candidacy, I see the american people putting faith and “real change” back into the ballot box.

No comments:

"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty" (Churchill)