Gov. Romney at the GOP convention in 1964

Gov. Romney at the GOP convention in 1964

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Gov. Mitt Romney at the GOP convention in 1964

Some extremist group have embraced GOP presidential hopeful Donald Trump.

Will Trump or other GOP leaders address that at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland? 

That is a question that may have prompted CBS News to run a video and a story on its website about Michigan Gov. George Romney's concerns about the GOP. 

Jake Miller of CBS News writes that Romney went to the GOP convention in San Francisco, not to sabotage the impending nomination of Barry Goldwater, but to alter the Republican Party platform to affirm that extremist groups like the John Birch Society and the KKK, that viewed Goldwater as an ally, had no place in the GOP.

CBS published part of his speech to GOP delegates:

Thank you very much. Mr. Chairman, Congressman Lair, fellow delegates and fellow Republicans. I am here at this convention because I profoundly believe that present basic trends and perils are rushing us towards a national crisis. And I believe to avoid or survive that crisis, the Republican Party must promote the programs and provide the leadership that will capture the interest, respect, and support of a majority of Americans. I think the future of this nation depends on that.

I want to make it perfectly clear: I am not here to aid any candidate speaking at this time, and I am not here to detract from any candidate. And I appear to seek your open-minded consideration of a still stronger and complete platform that will meet our needs as a party and as a nation. We have a good platform. I'm not here to criticize this platform. I'm here to improve it.

Political Playback: Before ‘Never Trump’, there was ‘Stop Goldwater’
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Political Playback: Before ‘Never Trump’, there was ‘Stop Goldwater’
I make this urgent plea for your open minds and hearts for the purpose of giving the candidate to be selected by this convention a better opportunity to win this fall.

The strongest personality on earth cannot deal with the problems of this nation except upon the basis of correct principles. Our party was founded at a time of grave national crisis. It was our mission, on our birth under Lincoln, to preserve this nation, established by divine providence with a divine destiny. The nation and its destinies were in peril, not only by the irreconcilable conflict between slavery and freedom, but also by the extremism of that time. And the extremism and lily-white Protestantism destroyed the Whig Party and brought the Republican party in to being.

The extremists of that day called themselves the Sacred Cult of the Star Spangled Banner officially. They were known popularly as the know-nothings. While their political leaders [took] refuge in silence, while other political leaders did, Lincoln spoke out as forcefully against the know-nothing extremists of his day as he did about slavery. He attacked both as a violation of the source of freedom and greatness. He attacked both slavery and the know nothing extremism as a violation of the principle of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of all mankind

And had Lincoln ignored the know-nothing extremists of his day, he would not have been president of the United States and saved the nation. In 1854 Lincoln said, quote, "As a nation we began by declaring that all men are created equal. We know practically read that all men are created equal except Negroes. When the know nothings get control it will read, all men are created equal except Negroes and foreigners and Catholics. When it comes to this I shall prefer immigrating to some country where they make no pretense of loving liberty. To Russia for example, where despotism can be taken pure and without the fake alloy of democracy." Those are Lincoln's own words.

 

Read more: CBS News