Shortly before departing the governor’s office, Mitt Romney oversaw the purchase of 17 state-issued hard drives, and wiped clean computers and servers that contained electronic copies of emails in the governor’s office. Why? For one reason: to purge his administration’s email records.
Romney later admitted the move was intended to hide official correspondence from the public and keep potentially-embarrassing information under wraps in advance of his presidential campaign. (Yes, this is the same Romney who often speaks about “transparency” in government.)
The email purge was largely successful, but not completely — some of the emails from one member of Romney’s cabinet survived, and the Wall Street Journal used a public-records request to obtain the correspondence between the cabinet secretary and other top Romney officials.
The most interesting revelations relate to Romney’s efforts to pass his health care reform law.
[A] small cache of emails survived, including some that have never publicly surfaced surrounding Mr. Romney’s efforts to pass his now-controversial health-care law. The emails show the Republican governor was closely engaged in negotiating details of the bill, working with top Democratic state leaders and drafting early copies of opinion articles backing it.
Mr. Romney and his aides, meanwhile, strongly defended the so-called individual mandate, a requirement that everyone in Massachusetts have or buy health insurance. And they privately discussed ideas that might be anathema to today’s GOP — including publicly shaming companies that didn’t provide enough health insurance to employees.
At the time, it turns out, Democrats weren’t on board with an individual mandate, but Romney and his aides championed the provision. His health secretary wrote in early 2006, “We must have an individual mandate for any plan to work.”
In fact, Romney personally drafted an op-ed making the case for a mandate. “Either the individual pays or the taxpayers pay. A free ride on government is not libertarian,” the governor wrote, adding, “An uninsured libertarian might counter that he could refuse the free care, but under law, that is impossible — and inhumane.”








