White House
hopeful Mitt Romney and 400 of his backers raised more than
$6.5 million on Monday in a glitzy fund-raising blitz in
Boston that will force all Republican rivals to take
notice. ''They've come together and blown us away
today and humbled us at the same time,'' said the former
Massachusetts governor as he clutched the hand of his wife, Ann.
The figure dwarfed the $2 million that Sen. John
McCain raised and the $1 million collected by former
New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani. Like Romney, the
two have created committees exploring bids for the GOP's
presidential nomination.
While Romney said he was not trying to send a
message to anyone but his supporters, one of his
national fund-raising cochairmen disagreed. ''I think
it's going to be a very strong message today, to
everybody,'' said Tom Tellefsen, a classmate of
Romney's at Harvard Business School and a top
fund-raiser for President Bush. ''I think it's going to be a
strong message to McCain as well as Giuliani, and I
think it's going to be a strong message to those that
are considering or haven't really yet laid the
groundwork that maybe they should have.''
The event, at the Boston Convention and
Exhibition Center, featured a four-screen projection
TV system hung from the center of a ceiling,
displaying pictures that included Romney in the Oval Office
and at the presidential lectern. Besides the
''National Call Day'' event, Romney also sought over
the weekend to shore up his support among evangelicals
who have been dismayed to learn that he ran as a moderate
for the U.S. Senate in 1994 as well as for
Massachusetts governor in 2002. He now is staunchly
opposed to same-sex marriage and says he supports a
state-by-state approach to abortion rights.
''Now, I wasn't always a Ronald Reagan
conservative. Neither was Ronald Reagan, by the way.
And perhaps some in this room have had the opportunity
to listen, learn, and benefit from life's
experience--and to grow in wisdom, as I have,''
Romney said at a conservative gathering in Sea Island,
Ga. ''My life experience convinced me that Ronald Reagan was
right. I'm a conservative that gets the job done. And you
don't just have to take my word for it, you can just
look at my record,'' he added.
While Romney's presidential committee is still
labeled ''exploratory,'' he and his staff have made it
clear they are in the race to win. In e-mails sent
last week, two of Romney's sons estimated he would need to
raise $100 million to be among the ''serious contenders''
for the nomination. The stated goal on Monday was $1
million. (Glen Johnson, AP)