Thursday was supposed to be the easy day, when Mitt Romney would
audition as a world leader here by talking about his shared values with the
heads of the United States’ friendliest ally.
Instead, the Republican presidential candidate insulted Britain as
it welcomed the world for the Olympics by casting doubt on London’s readiness
for the Games, which open Friday, saying that the preparations he had seen were
“disconcerting” and that it is “hard to know
just how well it will turn out.”
The comments drew a swift rebuke from Prime Minister David Cameron
and, by day’s end, a public tongue-lashing by the city’s mayor as the Olympic
torch arrived in Hyde Park.
“I hear
there’s a guy called Mitt Romney who wants to know whether we’re ready,” Mayor
Boris Johnson cried out to a crowd of at least 60,000. “He wants to know
whether we’re ready. Are we ready? Are we ready? Yes, we are.”
Cameron, responding to the candidate with a note of irritation, said
that “of course it’s easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of
nowhere,” an apparent reference to Salt Lake City. That city held the 2002
Olympic Winter Games, which Romney organized. The prime minister and the mayor
are conservatives, making their scolding all the more embarrassing for the
candidate, an otherwise sympathetic ideological ally.
It was a difficult start to Romney’s first foray on the
international stage as the presumptive Republican nominee, one that was
supposed to present him to U.S. voters as a potential commander in chief.
Beyond his Olympics remarks, Romney had a series of uncomfortable moments —
some of them seemingly minor, but distractions nonetheless.
At one point, he told reporters about his previously undisclosed
meeting with the head of the MI-6, Britain’s secret intelligence agency.
On the first official day of his six-day overseas tour, Romney
declined to answer reporters’ questions about his foreign policy positions ,
saying he will avoid talking about any policy specifics while he is on foreign
soil.
He ended the day in a scene that could prove damaging for a
candidate sometimes labeled as out of touch. A dinner fundraiser, which raised
$2 million, was co-hosted by executives at banks under investigation in
London’s rate-fixing scandal.
For any candidate on a foreign trip, the margin for error is small,
with every misstep magnified, fairly or not — especially so for Romney, whose
visit is drawing inevitable comparisons to Barack Obama’s largely successful
foreign tour as a candidate in 2008.
The notoriously harsh British media spewed out brutal headlines
about what they almost uniformly deemed a bomb of a debut for Romney. The
criticism reverberated across the Atlantic and into the United States,
overshadowing a day in which Romney wanted to polish his diplomatic
credentials, although his surrogates insisted that they were not worried about
overseas coverage.
Olympics organizers have had to cope with a series of security
blunders, including a disclosure that the private contractor hired to provide
guards for the Games was 3,500 staff members short. The military scrambled to
fill in the gap.
Still, the hosts did not seem to appreciate a foreign visitor
reminding them about the problems. Romney voiced his doubts about the final
preparations for the Olympics during an interview with NBC News’s Brian
Williams, taped Wednesday as he began his trip.
Cameron responded by telling reporters on Thursday: “You’re going to
see beyond doubt that Britain can deliver.”
He added: “We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest,
most active, bustling cities anywhere in the world.”
A headline Thursday on the Web site of the Guardian newspaper said,
“Mitt Romney’s Olympics blunder stuns No. 10 and hands gift to Obama,” while
the Telegraph published an opinion column with a sub-headline that read: “Mitt
Romney is perhaps the only politician who could start a trip that was supposed
to be a charm offensive by being utterly devoid of charm and mildly offensive.”
By Thursday, in back-to-back meetings with British officials, Romney
was lavishing praise on London’s Olympics efforts. He said that “it is
impossible for absolutely no mistakes to occur” at any Olympic Games. And in an
appearance with Cameron in the formal White Room at 10 Downing St., he
pronounced the Games “fabulous.”
“I was
watching last night the torch relay coming across Great Britain and the stories
about that, and the enthusiasm and passion,” he said. “And I love the theme,
‘Inspire a Generation.’ ”
Later, Romney told reporters, “My experience as an Olympic organizer
is that there are always a few very small things that end up going not quite
right in the first day or so. Those get ironed out and then when the Games
themselves begin and the athletes take over, all the mistakes that the
organizing committee — and I made a few — all of those are overwhelmed by the
many things that the athletes carry out that capture the spirit of the Games.”
Romney passed on several opportunities to discuss his foreign policy
proposals. He told reporters that he had spoken to British leaders about the
global economy and the world’s hot spots — including Syria, Iran, Egypt and
Afghanistan — but insisted that he would not describe his positions while
traveling abroad.
Several hours later, Romney campaign aides hastily arranged a
briefing for reporters with a campaign adviser who attended the meetings to
provide a more substantive window into the talks.
The adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that
concern about the U.S. and British economies, coupled with fear of global
fallout from the European debt crisis, consumed many of the meetings.
The leaders discussed recent developments in Syria and Iran,
although Romney did not say how he would handle the crises because he did not
want to “make his own foreign policy” while overseas, the adviser said.
Romney’s visit to Britain, where the country’s leaders boast of its
long-standing “special relationship” with the United States, was expected to be
a relatively easy stop, diplomatically speaking, on his foreign tour. From
here, he will navigate more difficult terrain in Israel and Poland.
But in London, Romney hit a few other rough patches as well. During
a morning press appearance with Ed Miliband, head of the opposition Labor
Party, the candidate broke with typical protocol. While Miliband called on two
British journalists to ask questions, which Romney answered, Romney did not
call on any U.S. journalists.
While visiting with Foreign Secretary William Hague at the stately
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Romney also met with the leader of the MI-6,
the intelligence agency. The meeting was not on Romney’s public schedule, but
the candidate referred to it in his remarks to reporters, saying they
“discussed Syria and the hope for a more peaceful future for that country.”
At the evening fundraiser, held at the five-star Mandarin Oriental
hotel, Romney showed no signs that anything had gone awry. He mused about his
heartstrings being tugged as he drove past a statue of former prime minister Winston
Churchill — “with him larger than life, enormous heft of that sculpture
suggesting the scale, and the grandeur and the greatness of the man” — and his
interview with CNN’s Piers Morgan, who he noted “did a fine job.”
“It has been
a marvelous day for us,” Romney said.
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