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Romney Moves to Explore White House Bid

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BOSTON (AP) - Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said Wednesday he's taking the first step in a 2008 presidential bid, joining an increasingly crowded field of Republican hopefuls.

"We've filed exploratory papers today, and so the process is moving forward on that front," he told reporters Wednesday, his final full day in office. He added, "No announcement date for you yet," but he is planning a major fundraiser in Boston on Monday.

A spokesman for Romney later said the paperwork officially would be filed late Wednesday afternoon in Washington with the Federal Election Commission. The formation of an exploratory committee allows Romney to raise and spend money for a presidential run.

Romney's confirmation of his plans comes after a 10-day period of contemplation during a family vacation in Utah and follows several years in which he acknowledged he was considering a White House run but hadn't made a final decision about pursuing the presidency.

If elected, Romney would be the nation's first Mormon president.

The one-term governor joins a GOP field in which Sen. John McCain of Arizona and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani have grabbed the lead in early polling. Both created exploratory committees late last year.

Other Republican candidates include Kansas Sen. Sam Brownback and former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson, who have established exploratory committees. California Rep. Duncan Hunter and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore have said they intend to follow suit. Others said to be mulling a bid include Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, New York Gov. George Pataki, Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, and former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating.

In recent weeks, Romney has faced questions about his conservative credentials on issues such as gay rights and abortion. Romney challenged Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy in 1994, and in a letter he promised a gay Republican group he would be a stronger advocate for gays than his rival.

Romney ran as a moderate during his gubernatorial campaign. Despite saying he personally opposed abortion, he not only pledged to leave the state's abortion laws intact, but noted his mother, Lenore, ran for U.S. Senate in Michigan in 1970 as a supporter of abortion rights.

He now stresses his opposition to abortion in speeches across the country.

In 2002, Romney's supporters also handed out fliers with well wishes from him and his running mate at Boston's annual Gay Pride Parade. And he was endorsed by the Log Cabin Republicans, a group of gay party activists.

Nonetheless, Romney has insisted his opposition to gay marriage has been unflinching. He has lambasted the Supreme Judicial Court for its November 2003 decision making Massachusetts the first state to legalize gay marriage.

Not only does Romney diverge from conservatives on some social issues, but many evangelicals don't consider Mormons a true branch of Christianity.

Romney's decision makes him the third recent Massachusetts resident to run for the White House, following Democrats Michael S. Dukakis and John Kerry in 1988 and 2004. Neither man succeeded.

Dukakis panned Romney's announcement as he arrived at the Statehouse on Wednesday to witness the swearing-in of new legislators.

"Here's a guy who left the governor's office about two years ago, and now he says he wants to run for president?" Dukakis said. "Doesn't make a lot of sense to me." Continue >>

 
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