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Maurine Proctor
Wednesday, August 29 2012

Ann Romney: Mitt’s Secret Weapon Sparkles at Convention

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ANN ROMNEY 1

Ann Romney admitted she was feeling just a big shaky during the sound check before her speech at the Republican Convention, but she went on with brightness and confidence to move and inspire the crowd who gave her a standing ovation.

Since this was the first time she had used a teleprompter to give a speech, Mitt gave her some advice. "He said to just look as though someone's face is there as though you are talking to someone, and that helped a lot," she said.

The much-anticipated speech was slated to be window into the human side of Mitt Romney, revealing the man behind the candidate. He wanted her front and center at the convention as she is so much of what defines him.

Wearing a patriotic red dress, Ann, who usually does not use a script when she talks, delivered a heartfelt speech that she had written herself. Her words demonstrated why this woman whom Mitt fell in love with when she was only 16 is his best campaigner and most trusted advisor.

Some have written that he looks best when she is with him and he is the only governor of Massachusetts to have insisted that his wife be portrayed with him in the official governor’s portrait.

In the political world that is so often rancorous, her topic was surprising.

She said, “I want to talk to you tonight not about politics and not about party..I want to talk not about what divides us, but what holds us together as an American family…Tonight I want to talk to you about love.” This love was not only for “the man I met at a dance years ago”, but also for “the profound love I have, and I know we share, for this country.

She had told ABC’s Diane Sawyer before her speech that Mitt’s attaining the presidential nomination wasn’t so much a sense of jubilation as something else. "It's a settling in of the awesomeness of how many people are counting on us," she said. "What I'm feeling and what I think is what Mitt is feeling as well... sort of a humility that is millions of people have put their trust in us and we don't want to disappoint."

Those who have tried to make the election about class warfare attempt to paint Ann Romney as an out-of-touch Republican country-club elitist, a rich girl who can’t understand the needs of others, but she painted quite a different picture in her speech.

“I want us to think tonight about the love we all share for those Americans, our brothers and sisters, who are going through difficult times, whose days are never easy, nights are always long, and whose work never seems done…

“The parents who lie awake at night side by side, wondering how they’ll be able to pay the mortgage or make the rent; the single dad who’s working extra hours tonight, so that his kids can buy some new clothes to go back to school, can take a school trip or play a sport, so his kids can feel like the other kids.

“And the working moms who love their jobs but would like to work just a little less to spend more time with the kids, but that’s just out of the question with this economy. Or that couple who would like to have another child, but wonder how will they afford it.

“I’ve heard your voices: ‘I’m running in place,’ ‘’we just can’t get ahead.’”

Then she made a special appeal to women. “You know what it’s like to work a little harder during the day to earn the respect you deserve at work and then come home to help with that book report which just has to be done. You know what those late night phone calls with an elderly parent are like and the long weekend drives just to see how they’re doing. You know the fastest route to the local emergency room and which doctors actually answer the phone when you call at night.

“You know what it’s like to sit in that graduation ceremony and wonder how it was that so many long days turned into years that went by so quickly.

“You are the best of America. You are the hope of America. There would not be an America without you.”

She spoke of $60 tabs at the gas station, grocery bills that soar and said, “We’re too smart to know there aren’t easy answers. But we’re not dumb enough to accept that there aren’t better answers.”

This is not a world that Ann cannot understand. She is the granddaughter of a Welsh coal miner who was determined that his kids would get out of the mines and escape poverty. Her father got his first job at 6 and immigrated to America at 15. Her future father-in-law George Romney did not graduate from college, but instead became a carpenter, then with hard work became the head of car manufacturer and finally governor of Michigan.

She married Mitt when was 19, because they were deeply in love. They became engaged on the way home from the airport when he was returning from his mission.

She said, “There were many reasons to delay marriage, and you know? We just didn’t care. We got married and moved into a basement apartment. We walked to class together, shared the housekeeping, and ate a lot of pasta and tuna fish. Our desk was a door propped up on sawhorses. Our dining room table was a fold-down ironing board in the kitchen.”

Ann said, “I read somewhere that Mitt and I have a “storybook marriage.


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