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Mitt Romney on Government ReformFormer Republican Governor (MA) |
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.
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.
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.
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.
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].
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.