Team Romney earns gaffe gold in Britain
Mitt Romney's trip abroad was meant to illustrate his readiness for the international stage as he attempts to deny U.S. President Barack Obama a second term in November.
Instead, there was this head-line Thursday adorning one of the biggest and most respected newspapers in Britain, the Guardian: "Mitt Romney's Olympics blunder stuns No. 10 and hands gift to Obama."
The paper also featured a live blog devoted to Romney ridicule.
"Romney in London," read one Tweet highlighted on the blog. "Come on. We needed this. It's a little comic relief. Kind of like Mr. Bean, only he's an American."
Indeed, Romney's visit to the United Kingdom has been a veritable public relations disaster, one that immediately got off to a bad start when an unnamed adviser told the Daily Telegraph that the candidate's "Anglo-Saxon heritage" means he can forge closer ties with Britain than Obama.
As Romney tried to distance himself from those remarks, the Republican presidential hopeful set off another firestorm when he suggested London wasn't properly prepared for the Summer Games.
"You know, it's hard to know just how well it will turn out," he told NBC News on Wednesday. "There are a few things that were disconcerting, the stories about the private security firm not having enough people, sup-posed strike of the immigration and customs officials; that obviously is not something which is encouraging."
Prime Minister David Cameron was not amused.
"You're going to see beyond doubt that Britain can deliver," a testy Cameron told reporters on Thursday.
"We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active, bustling cities any-where in the world. Of course it's easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere," he said in apparent reference to the Salt Lake City Olympics managed by Romney in 2002.
Later Thursday, London Mayor Boris Johnson joined in on the pile-on on the eve of the Games' opening ceremony.
"There's a guy called Mitt Romney who wants to know whether we're ready. Are we ready? Are we ready? Yes we are!" Johnson told cheering crowds in Hyde Park.
During a 45-minute meeting at 10 Downing Street on Thurs-day, Cameron reportedly raised his dismay about the remarks. Romney emerged from the meeting with a decidedly different tone.
"I am very delighted with the prospects of a highly successful Olympic Games," he said. "What I have seen shows imagination and forethought and a lot of organization and I expect the Games to be highly successful."
And yet the gaffes didn't stop at the Olympics. Romney also mentioned meeting with the head of the top-secret MI6 British intelligence agency, something considered a protocol lapse.
Even the right-wing British media were critical.
The Daily Mail called Romney's British visit "humiliating," adding it had "got off to an incredibly rocky start."
The tabloid also reported on what it considered another gaffe, calling it "cringeworthy" when Romney referred to British opposition leader Ed Mili-band as "Mr. Leader" after the two men sat down for their own meeting. Other media suggested Romney had forgotten Miliband's name.
Times of London columnist Janice Turner wondered how Romney will manage trips to actual trouble spots.
"So Mitt Romney disses our Olympics. We're the Special Relationship, the easypeasy bit of U.S. foreign relations. How will he deal with China?" she Tweeted.
Romney has also raised eye-brows for a fundraiser Thurs-day night that was expected to attract employees of Barclays bank, the first financial institution to admit it was manipulating a key market index.
Bob Diamond, the disgraced former head of Barclays, was slated to attend the fundraiser but has since cancelled. Bar-clays has been fined $453 mil-lion by American and British authorities.
After attending the opening ceremony of the London Games on Friday, Romney will then visit Israel and Poland, meeting with both public and private officials.
Mitt Romney's trip abroad was meant to illustrate his readiness for the international stage as he attempts to deny U.S. President Barack Obama a second term in November.
Instead, there was this head-line Thursday adorning one of the biggest and most respected newspapers in Britain, the Guardian: "Mitt Romney's Olympics blunder stuns No. 10 and hands gift to Obama."
The paper also featured a live blog devoted to Romney ridicule.
"Romney in London," read one Tweet highlighted on the blog. "Come on. We needed this. It's a little comic relief. Kind of like Mr. Bean, only he's an American."
Indeed, Romney's visit to the United Kingdom has been a veritable public relations disaster, one that immediately got off to a bad start when an unnamed adviser told the Daily Telegraph that the candidate's "Anglo-Saxon heritage" means he can forge closer ties with Britain than Obama.
As Romney tried to distance himself from those remarks, the Republican presidential hopeful set off another firestorm when he suggested London wasn't properly prepared for the Summer Games.
"You know, it's hard to know just how well it will turn out," he told NBC News on Wednesday. "There are a few things that were disconcerting, the stories about the private security firm not having enough people, sup-posed strike of the immigration and customs officials; that obviously is not something which is encouraging."
Prime Minister David Cameron was not amused.
"You're going to see beyond doubt that Britain can deliver," a testy Cameron told reporters on Thursday.
"We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active, bustling cities any-where in the world. Of course it's easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere," he said in apparent reference to the Salt Lake City Olympics managed by Romney in 2002.
Later Thursday, London Mayor Boris Johnson joined in on the pile-on on the eve of the Games' opening ceremony.
"There's a guy called Mitt Romney who wants to know whether we're ready. Are we ready? Are we ready? Yes we are!" Johnson told cheering crowds in Hyde Park.
During a 45-minute meeting at 10 Downing Street on Thurs-day, Cameron reportedly raised his dismay about the remarks. Romney emerged from the meeting with a decidedly different tone.
"I am very delighted with the prospects of a highly successful Olympic Games," he said. "What I have seen shows imagination and forethought and a lot of organization and I expect the Games to be highly successful."
And yet the gaffes didn't stop at the Olympics. Romney also mentioned meeting with the head of the top-secret MI6 British intelligence agency, something considered a protocol lapse.
Even the right-wing British media were critical.
The Daily Mail called Romney's British visit "humiliating," adding it had "got off to an incredibly rocky start."
The tabloid also reported on what it considered another gaffe, calling it "cringeworthy" when Romney referred to British opposition leader Ed Mili-band as "Mr. Leader" after the two men sat down for their own meeting. Other media suggested Romney had forgotten Miliband's name.
Times of London columnist Janice Turner wondered how Romney will manage trips to actual trouble spots.
"So Mitt Romney disses our Olympics. We're the Special Relationship, the easypeasy bit of U.S. foreign relations. How will he deal with China?" she Tweeted.
Romney has also raised eye-brows for a fundraiser Thurs-day night that was expected to attract employees of Barclays bank, the first financial institution to admit it was manipulating a key market index.
Bob Diamond, the disgraced former head of Barclays, was slated to attend the fundraiser but has since cancelled. Bar-clays has been fined $453 mil-lion by American and British authorities.
After attending the opening ceremony of the London Games on Friday, Romney will then visit Israel and Poland, meeting with both public and private officials.