What does Mitt Romney stand for? What are his core beliefs? Why does this man want to be president? Does he merely like the shape of the room?
We often have elections in which candidates bend their personal beliefs or past history in order to appear more palatable to a wider electorate, but I cannot remember one that featured a candidate so apparently devoid of those beliefs. If Mitt Romney has a position on various social issues, there is precious little evidence of what it might be. If he has any actual plan for the nation other than a few entirely self-serving planks about his own taxes and how to regulate his own and allied industries, he has yet to give credible voice to it. Mitt Romney may be, if his own campaign is to be believed, the most generic person to have ever lived. There is apparently not a damn thing that he might have believed ten years ago that he feels the same way about today'and that includes his own signature accomplishments, by the way. Here is Mitt Romney, of RomneyCare, now the standard bearer against ObamaCare. Here is Mitt Romney the moderate, now Mitt Romney the "severe" conservative, now Mitt Romney the cipher. Here is the man who spent an entire summer campaigning on a twenty percent tax cut, only to toss it all away as soon as the debate season has started, claiming it is a tax cut that will not actually be a tax cut because it will just be a shifting of taxes that has no actual tax impact, which leads to the obvious question of why even bother with the thing, much less hold it up as your signature campaign theme only weeks earlier. He surrounded himself with the most neo of neoconservative foreign policy advisers, ultra-hawks who have continued to grace American op-ed pages with all the various reasons why America needs three wars instead of two, etc,. etc'and upon reaching the foreign policy debate, promptly flushed it all down the campaign toilet, apparently unable or unwilling to describe any foreign policy approach other than the bold and mostly inexplicable we should spend more money on boats plank.
There has not been a single case where, when Mitt Romney was pressed on a past inconvenient action, or belief, or issue, the Etch a Sketch did not simply shake off all the old assertions in favor of some new ones. Problem solved.
There are two separate issues here. First is the obviousness of the lies. The you didn't build that campaign continues to be the crowning, Orwellian achievement there'a swiftboat-styled editing of something that happened not decades ago, but something that happened right before our very eyes, with no shame whatsoever on the part of the liars. That is post-truth politics, summed up. The second issue is the politics of Ultimate Vapidity, the push to so empty the candidate of values and beliefs that he stands for literally nothing, a campaign heralding an expensive suit on a translucent man. You might presume that the pick of Paul Ryan for the vice presidency might signal an appreciation for Ryan's remarkably brutal cull-the-herd approach to the social safety net; you would be equally correct to presume it to be nothing more than the latest empty pander to the groups that need pandering to. There is no way to tell. It is at least telling, however, that after that selection Mitt Romney did not suddenly start promoting the ideas of Paul Ryan; instead, Paul Ryan began to be studiously genericized, like Mitt Romney.
I do not believe Mitt Romney is an ultraconservative. I do not for a minute think Mitt Romney has put enough thought into his own political beliefs to even have an opinion on them. His knowledge of every business he has ever run has, apparently, been reduced to how much money can be extracted from them (or, in the case of the Olympics, how much money he can extract from others for them.) I do not think he knows anything more about how to run the presidency than he does about how to run an office supply chain, or a factory, or a fetus disposal service. He is, as they say, a numbers man.
I am, however, quite convinced that Mitt Romney would govern as a weathervane. He will find, after the election, that his core convictions have suddenly returned, and that his core convictions are whatever he needs them to be in order to gain the support of his party in each circumstance, or to look credible in the eyes of that party, or in the eyes of the lobbyists that walk their aisles, or the industries that support them, and him. That is how these things tend to work, after all.
When Mitt Romney abandoned nearly every premise of his neoconservative advisers, few conservatives said a word. When your candidate is a liar, you learn to take lying in the spirit it is intended. Surely, though'what a place we find ourselves in. The scars of the Great Recession still very much unhealed, America is locked in serious debate over whether to appoint a Wall Street financier, an outsourcer, a cash-hoarder, a true vulture capitalist as our king. As long, that is, as he does not say too much, or have too many opinions on things.
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