For those of us who’ve marveled for months at Mitt Romney’s reluctance to take firm positions on major issues, it’s heartening to see so many others start to notice the same problem.
Politico reported this week, “Vague, general or downright evasive policy prescriptions on some of the most important issues facing the country are becoming the rule for Romney.” msnbc’s own Joe Scarborough told viewers this week the Romney campaign’s “goal is to not let people know what he believes on one issue after another.” Chris Cillizza noted yesterday that Romney “continues to decline to outline specific policies or take firm positions,” adding, “How sustainable is this?”
Today, the Boston Globe’s Scot Lehigh highlighted the same problem.
When Mitt Romney ran for governor in 2002, he campaigned like the management consultant he had once been, digging deep into issues and proposing thoughtful plans based on his analysis of the facts. It was a winning performance.
A decade later, however, it’s as if an anti-matter Mitt is running for president. This Romney takes regular refuge in vague answers and foggy formulations. And not just on caught-by-surprise matters such as President Obama’s new policy not to deport certain young illegal immigrants.
Rather, the vagueness extends to the heart of the Republican candidate’s core proposals.
There’s a running list of issues Romney is afraid to take a firm position on, and it keeps getting longer.
The next question, of course, is why Romney does this.









