As awful as Mitt Romney’s trip to the UK has been — and it really has been cover-your-eyes terrible — arguably the comments with the most domestic salience came last night, when the Republican candidate talked to NBC News’ Brian Williams.
The interview covered quite a bit of ground, but towards the end, the anchor wrapped up by asking how Romney’s economic agenda “would be different from what George W. Bush tried to push through.” Igor Volsky published the entire response, but the candidate simply ignored the question and talked about his economic priorities: drilling, trade, deficit reduction, education, and low taxes. He concluded, “My policies are very different than anything you’ve seen in the past.”
In other words, Romney’s vision now is the same as his vision in 2008, which was the same as George W. Bush’s vision during his two terms in office. How would Romney “be different”? He wouldn’t. By dodging Williams’ question, the candidate simply reinforced the underlying point.
Jon Chait noticed that Romney didn’t even dodge the question the way he’s supposed to dodge the question.
[T]he usual Republican answer here, on how their approach will succeed where Bush’s failed, is to shout, spending! Romney promises to cut it. Bush also promised to cut it, but didn’t. I don’t think this really answers the main objection — lower spending may help the long-term budget picture, but the policies Republicans most directly associate with economic growth are taxes, regulation, and energy. And here Romney really is proposing the exact same policies as Bush.









