Eva Addison is not a Republican. But she is a conservative – a conservative who, since 2008, increasingly has become upset with the policies of President Barack Obama, a Democrat.
While Addison says she did not pay attention to the 2008 election, she is paying attention now. And her candidate is Mitt Romney.
“I feel like he’s got family values and that he’s honest with his dealings, and I don’t think there are many politicians that are honest,” she said. “I believe, with all my heart, he has the integrity it is going to take to turn America around economically and morally.”
While Addison says she did not pay attention to the 2008 election, she is paying attention now. And her candidate is Mitt Romney.
“I feel like he’s got family values and that he’s honest with his dealings, and I don’t think there are many politicians that are honest,” she said. “I believe, with all my heart, he has the integrity it is going to take to turn America around economically and morally.”
Like Romney, Addison is a Latter-Day Saint. She attended Brigham Young University in Utah for three years before dropping out to get married, which she says “is a real typical Mormon thing.”
But that’s not why she is voting for Romney. In fact, she first strongly considered Texas Gov. Rick Perry, an evangelical Christian. But Perry’s performances in the debates last fall changed her mind.
“I don’t think (Perry) has the intelligence, and I don’t mean that in a bad way,” she said. “I don’t think he’s quick enough or has the intelligence on spur-of-the-moment stuff to make things work – and that has bothered me.”
Addison, 50, lives in Anderson, where she teaches fifth grade at a local elementary school. Her unhappiness with Obama stems from what she calls a “sense of entitlement” that she says Obama fosters among some people who take advantage of government programs like welfare.
“Obama wants to make things a whole lot easier on them as though they deserve (it),” she said.
In Romney, however, she sees a person who is “willing to sacrifice things we may want in order for our grandchildren to have things (they) may need.”
Romney was criticized last week for saying “I like being able to fire people,” a comment he made while campaigning in New Jersey. Romney was talking about health insurance companies and how he wants Americans to be able to “fire” them if they are unsatisfied with them.
But opponents used the comment to criticize Romney, calling him cold and out of touch with the needs of Americans, many of whom were fired during the Great Recession. (Perry’s campaign went so far as to make the comment a ringtone available for people to download to their phones.)
Addison, Romney’s supporter, is more forgiving.
“At first I thought, ‘Oh my goodness Mitt, you just said something terrible!’ ” Addison said. “But if someone is not doing their job, we have the right to go somewhere else to get somebody competent. I love that idea.”
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