By KASIE HUNT By KASIE HUNT ADVERTISING Associated Press WOLFEBORO, N.H. — Mitt Romney’s large family is at the center of his life and his presidential campaign. His five sons, five daughters-in-law and 18 grandchildren — “a bevy of Romneys,”
By KASIE HUNT
Associated Press
WOLFEBORO, N.H. — Mitt Romney’s large family is at the center of his life and his presidential campaign.
His five sons, five daughters-in-law and 18 grandchildren — “a bevy of Romneys,” he’s called them — were front and center on Independence Day as he paraded his family down Main Street in this resort town where the family vacations.
“My family’s so big it takes two risers!” Romney said after he reached the end of the parade route and held a campaign event in a field overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee. As he spoke, he was flanked on two raised platforms by his sons and many grandchildren.
While a few family members sometimes accompany Romney on the campaign, the annual family vacation provided a rare opportunity for him to showcase all the members of the group he invokes so often. They number 30 in all, and his wife, Ann, laments that’s it tough to get them in one place at the same time.
At a time when nontraditional families have become more common, and when even the Romneys watch “Modern Family,” a popular sitcom that centers on unconventional family arrangements, the Romney brood stands out. Mitt and Ann Romney have been married for more than 40 years.
It’s an embodiment of the family values message that resonates with Republicans and Democrats, and it offers a chance for Romney to portray himself as caring and authentic. That’s a handy perception for him to cultivate in the face of Democratic attempts to paint him as a heartless millionaire.
Romney’s two presidential campaigns — he fell short of winning the nomination in 2008 — haven’t been easy on everyone, though.
“The process is tough. It’s tough on the family,” said Tagg Romney, the eldest of the Romney brothers. “The issues that the media focuses on don’t tend to be the largest, most important issues. The little things that trip you up tend to be little gaffes or slips of the tongue that end up defining the race, and life’s too short for that.”
There are five Romney sons: Tagg, Matt, Josh, Ben and Craig. All tall and photogenic, they range in age from 31 to 42. Three work in real estate, one is in private equity, and the fifth is finishing his medical residency.
To hear them tell it, Mitt Romney was a consistently engaged father, regularly talking to his boys about career choices. The sons acknowledge that Tagg probably felt the most pressure to follow in his father’s footsteps, and he has, attending Harvard Business School and founding a private equity firm.
Even so, Tagg says his father encouraged each son to choose his own career path, but he did push all of them hard to get good grades and continue their educations beyond college. All five boys attended the prestigious all-boys Belmont Hill School outside Boston, where they were required to play three sports. The private school was so academically rigorous, one son said, that it made college easy.
All five went to Brigham Young University, the Mormon college in Utah where three met their wives. The three oldest went on to Harvard Business School. Ben went to Tufts Medical School, and Craig has a graduate degree from Columbia.
They all married in their 20s and have 18 children total: Tagg has six kids, Matt has five, Josh has four, Ben has one and Craig has two. The grandkids range in age from just a few weeks — Tagg and his wife, Jen, just had twins that were born via a surrogate — to 16 years. All five Romney daughters-in-law are stay-at-home moms.
Romney appears to be an affectionate father, seen easily putting his arm around one of his sons as his family relaxed on the lawn behind their lake house. He seems to relish his role as a grandfather: During his vacation, he took some of them around Lake Winnipesaukee on his boat and was spotted on his lawn mower with two grandchildren on his lap, one wearing a captain’s hat.
During the church service they attended a few days earlier, Ben Romney sent his preschool-age daughter, Soleil, running down the row of chairs to see her grandfather. “Go say hi,” Ben said quietly. The elder Romney opened his arms and smiled, encouraging her. Ann Romney pulled Soleil up onto her lap as her husband held out one of his wife’s bracelets for their granddaughter to try on.
Tagg and Josh are the most involved, while Matt and Craig tend to hang back. Ben is rarely seen on the campaign trail, busy with his medical residency and less interested in politics than the others. Tagg is the only brother who gets the emails that campaign aides send out to staffers, but both he and Josh follow the campaign’s traveling press corps on Twitter.
“We looked at each other,” Romney said, “and said, ‘Oh, gosh, our love really started something, didn’t it?’”