The Senate is likely to vote today on the anti-contraception Blunt Amendment, championed by Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt (R), which would allow all private-sector employers to deny any health services that businesses might find morally objectionable. Despite the controversy surrounding the measure, Mitt Romney hadn’t taken a position on the bill.
Yesterday, that changed. Jim Heath, a reporter with the Ohio News Network, asked the Republican presidential candidate about the anti-contraception proposal, and got an unexpected response.
It was pretty straightforward. Heath even explained what he was referring to: “Blunt-Rubio is being debated, I believe, later this week. It deals with banning or allowing employers to ban providing female contraception. Have you taken a position on it? He [Santorum] said he was for that. We’ll talk about personhood in a second, but he’s for that. Have you taken a position?”
Romney said, “I’m not for the bill,” and proceeded to argue that presidential candidates shouldn’t get into “questions about contraception.”
For all of the shameless pandering Romney has done to the far-right Republican base, this unambiguous answer appeared to reflect remarkable bravery on the candidate’s part. Republicans have been hyperventilating for weeks about the issue, and here was the likely GOP presidential nominee announcing, on camera, his opposition to his party’s legislative remedy.
Like too many of Romney’s positions, it didn’t last.
Just one hour after saying he’s “not for” the Blunt Amendment, the presidential hopeful announced, “Of course I support the Blunt Amendment.” Romney added that he “didn’t understand” Heath’s question, and his campaign spokesperson issued a statement, complaining that the question was “confusing.”
As the afternoon progressed, Romney backers even began complaining that reports documenting the candidate’s actual words were somehow unfair — as if quoting what presidential candidates say on television is now evidence of irresponsible reporting.








