Governor Roemer sat down with Mediaite and discussed the frustration of being marginalized by his party, the dangers of letting Super PACs run wild, and the progress that he’s making in New Hampshire (In the latest 7NEWS/Suffolk University Poll, Roemer
MEDIAITE: Since you haven’t had a chance to do this at the debates, how about we start with the typical tradition of you having 30 seconds to introduce yourself?
BUDDY ROEMER: I’m Buddy Roemer, I’m from the great state of Louisiana, I’ve been Governor, I’ve been Congressman eight years from Louisiana. I’m the only guy running who’s been a Governor and Congressman. I’m a father, I’m a grandfather — three kids, three grandchildren. I’m a banker. I built a billion dollar bank, we didn’t foreclose on anybody, we are profitable, we didn’t take any bailout money. And I’m running for President because I think the country’s headed in the wrong direction. I think Washington is bought and sold by special interests. I think the average citizen has no chance. I think the average person can stand a lifetime in a line waiting for opportunity and a guy with the big check can come up the last minute and take it away from him. It’s not right – jobs and justice, that’s why I run.
M: It has to be frustrating to have these
BR: I haven’t been heard yet, and that’s what’s frustrating. Look, if people hear me and they don’t want to vote for me, it’s a free country and I’ll be proud to be a guy who ran for President. But if they think this country can be made better by working together—Democrats and Republicans and Independents, I want them to look at me. I’m 68, I have no ego drive. I’ve been to the White House many times as a young Congressman working with Ronald Reagan. If I never go back, I’ll be happy. But I don’t see anybody else — anybody else — who’s not taking the big money. Bought and sold. It’s a disgrace.
M: So when you look at the other candidates out there, are there any that you kind of… like?
BR: I like them all. They all have some talent and they all have dignity, but they don’t have integrity. By this, I mean if you spend enough time in the trough of special interests and government gifts then you don’t smell a pig when it comes. And Newt Gingrich has been in the trough so long he can’t smell a pig. Everything
Rick Perry has seven super PACs. Mitt Romney has three. Barack Obama has two. It never stops. I can’t find a candidate, and let me be just deadly honest here — I can’t find a candidate that talks about campaign reform. I can’t find a candidate who says no to the special interests. And, therefore, I’ve come to the conclusion that I can’t find a candidate who’d be worth a damn as President. If GE’s going to make the decisions, why don’t we elect GE?
M: And you’ve really prided yourself on staying out of this… limiting donations to $100, right?
BR: I have raised $250,000. My average gift is $51.45. I’ve had contributions from every state in America. I am running a social media, social network campaign. I am centered in New Hampshire, and I am on the rise. I am on the rise. Only three candidates
M: This is nothing new to you, right? You made a really big comeback when you were running for Governor of Louisiana.
BR: I did. I had no chance to win. Just like here, people wrote me off, they laughed at me. All the politicians, particularly: ‘He can’t win. He doesn’t take the big checks.’
With 45 days to go, I had 2% of the vote. On Election Day, I beat everybody running. The race was over. They didn’t even have a runoff. I beat three Congressmen, a Governor who had never lost an election — and had been elected Governor three times — and a Secretary of State. I beat ’em all! It wasn’t that I was so good, it was the issue is so good. How about we the people running Washington rather than the lobbyists? It’s just that simple.
M: The difference was that they let you debate in that election…
In Louisiana, I was included in every debate.