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by David Taintor49784
Mitt Romney is off to a spectacularly bad start in
London, at least according to the British press ridiculing the
Republican candidate on his first major foreign trip.
British officials — and the newspapers that cover them — took offense
to Romney questioning whether London is well-prepared to handle the
security issues ahead of the summer games. Romney called the situation
“disconcerting.” British Prime Minister David Cameron hit back, saying
there is no doubt “Britain can deliver.”
“We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active,
bustling cities anywhere in the world,” Cameron added. “Of course it’s
easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere.”
Then there was the issue of whether Romney forgot Labour leader Ed
Miliband’s name, referring to him as “Mr. Leader.” All in all, “not a
great day at the office,” Rupert Murdoch’s The Sun tabloid wrote.
Here’s how Romney’s visit to London played in the UK press.
The Financial Times played it relatively straight,
writing: “Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican candidate for the US
presidency, got off to a shaky start in his effort to show a
statesmanlike profile when he seemed to get into a public spat with the
UK prime minister over London’s readiness to host the Olympics.”
So Mitt Romney disses our Olympics. We're
the Special Relationship, the easypeasy bit of US foreign relations. How
will he deal with China?
The Independent wondered
whether Romney forgot Ed Miliband’s name during their meeting, writing
that it followed his earlier “gaffe” of questioning the Olympic
preparedness.
In an op-ed, the Telegraph’s Alex Spillius wrote: “[I]f Mitt Romney doesn’t like us, we shouldn’t care.”
In The Daily Mail’s classic punchy style, the paper carried this headline:
The paper called the start of Romney’s trip “humiliating.”
Sticking with the slapping theme, the London Evening Standard wrote: “David Cameron slaps down US presidential hopeful Mitt Romney over Games gaffe.”
The UK’s Channel 4 news even awarded medal status to Romney visit: a “golden gaffe.”
“It probably wasn’t the most diplomatic way to begin his London trip -
but Mitt Romney told US television network NBC that he wasn’t sure if
Britain was really ready to host the Olympic Games,” Felicity Spector wrote.
Even the BBC couldn’t help but get in on the fun. “Mr Romney is
credited with rescuing the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City, now he’s
appeared to question London’s readiness to host a successful olympics,”
host George Alagiah said. Throwing it over to North America editor Mark
Mardell, Alagiah said: “If (Romney’s) here to make friends, he’s got a
funny way of showing it.”
David Taintor
David Taintor is the Front Page Editor at TPM, where he contributes
to TPM's Livewire coverage, among other areas. David is from Chanhassen,
Minnesota, where, yes, it gets very cold. Reach him at taintor [at]
talkingpointsmemo.com
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