Mitt’s primary season demons return-Dems know how to exploit Romney’s vulnerabilities
http://www.salon.com/2012/07/09/mitt%E2%80%99s_primary_season_demons_return/
Mitts primary season demons return
Unlike Newt, Rick and his other GOP foes, Democrats know how to exploit Romneys vulnerabilities
By Steve Kornacki
Its still safe to say that compared to the other Republicans who sought their partys presidential nomination, Mitt Romney was the GOPs best option. But
there were warning signs during the primary season that hed be a far from ideal challenger to President Obama, and the potential impact of his deficiencies is becoming clearer.
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Will the circumstances of Romneys early July flip-flop end up mattering in November? Probably not. But the episode underscored how uncomfortable healthcare can be for Romney if hes pressed on it as he probably will be by Obama when they debate this fall. John Kerrys experience running against George W. Bush comes to mind here. For all of the criticisms Kerry leveled against Bush over his conduct of the Iraq war, Bush was always able to point out that Kerry himself had voted for the war. In the same way,
anytime Romney rails against the ACA, Obama will be able to reply, Gee, Mitt, where do you think I got the idea?
And theres also Romneys top-1 percent image, which was accentuated during the primary season by a series of wealth gaffes by the candidate and revelations about his personal finances particularly his use of Swiss bank accounts and offshore accounts. Again, this wasnt enough to sink him against his comical primary season opposition, but it raised the possibility that Romney would be a poor match for a post-Wall Street meltdown general election
a man whose upbringing, professional history, personal lifestyle and general bearing all mark him as a member of the super-affluent elite. Obama and his fellow Democrats argue that the GOP treats the top one percent as a protected class, so in nominating Romney they are playing to type.
Its not surprising, then, that Democrats have spent the last week playing up the pictures that emerged from Romneys holiday retreat at his opulent lakefront home in New Hampshire, especially those featuring the candidate on his jet ski. And
with the offshore accounts back in the news thanks to report from Vanity Fair and the Associated Press, it was inevitable that Democrats would now make them a centerpiece of their anti-Romney talking points.
Romneys goal is to be a generic opposition party candidate to avoid controversy and policy details and to function as the protest vehicle for economically frustrated swing voters who are eager to vote Obama out. Its not a bad game plan, given the state of the economy, and Romney certainly comes much closer to being generic than Santorum, Gingrich or any of the others who vied with him for the GOP nomination. But
he has vulnerabilities that could ultimately keep a critical chunk of swing voters from checking his name off, and those vulnerabilities are beginning to come into focus.