What if he did say on arrival
that the state of preparedness was “disconcerting?” Does that give the Mayor of
London the right to use him as a punch line to rouse Olympic crowds? Or PM
David Cameron to sniff, “Of course it’s easier if you hold Olympic Games in the
middle of nowhere,” in a bitchy putdown of those Romney managed in Salt Lake
City?
Americans watching him through
two election cycles understand that Romney is a stereotypical rich kid among political
rowdies, trapped in a school where they routinely steal his lunch money.
If he gets mussed up here over
tax returns and Bain claims, there is something substantial at stake, not just a
verbal gaffe like his unfortunate anatomical reference to the “backside of 10
Downing Street.”
As he tiptoes overseas with
the announced intention of not setting off foreign policy land mines, the
Republican candidate keeps stepping into cow flops instead, but it may be
asking too much of him not to do so.
He is clearly a new incarnation
of “Babbitt,” the narrow-minded American businessman in a novel that helped
Sinclair Lewis win a Nobel Prize almost a century ago for his depiction of a
booster who “considers it God's purpose that man should work, increase his
income, and enjoy modern improvements.”
In that role, Mitt Romney is
also the undisputed champion of issue flip-flopping but there is no reason to
expect him to show a matching verbal dexterity on more mundane matters.
As he makes his way to Israel
and Poland, patriotic Americans can only hope the possible future President can
show restraint in trying to ingratiate himself with Yiddish expressions or
Polish jokes.
Intentional standup comedy is
not his long suit.
Update: The campaign has found
a way to protect Romney from himself, by taking the unprecedented step of
barring the press from his Jerusalem fundraiser with casino owner Sheldon
Adelson and other fat cats of the Jewish persuasion.
That will cut down on reported gaffes
but hardly improve his relations with media mavens who have been increasingly
complaining about Palinlike efforts to keep him under wraps.
Update update: Another
flip-flop: Reporters allowed to hear Romney remarks but not Q&A.
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