Romney's Son Says He Never Wanted to be President Anyway
December 23, 2012
The Atlantic Wire - If you thought the tale of how Mitt Romney
lost the general election was already told, you would be wrong. Because
there is so much left to tell, like how Mitt never wanted to be
President anyway.
At least, that's what
Tagg Romney says in this new Boston Globe report on what went wrong with Romney's campaign. While the rest of the piece seems to say the problems lay in the
Romney campaign's
lack of technical advantage, and refusal to introduce the world to Mitt
Romney, the human being, this little morsel from the Republican's son
points to a larger problem:
“He wanted to be president less than anyone I’ve met in my life. He
had no desire to . . . run,” said Tagg, who worked with his mother, Ann,
to persuade his father to seek the presidency. “If he could have found
someone else to take his place . . . he would have been ecstatic to step
aside.
So, yeah, that might explain why
Mitt lost. Not wanting the job you need to publicly campaign for more
than a year to get is step one in the "Not Getting Elected Guide for
Dummies" book. Again, the rest of the mammoth piece,
which you really should read,
paints a larger picture of the struggle between Mitt's inner circle and
his campaign advisors over whether they should humanize Mitt, which was
ultimately their downfall. And, also, the
Obama campaign
had more staff and cooler tech stuff, like an app named Gordon, "after
the person who punched Houdini in the stomach shortly before the
magician died," and Narwhal, named after
the Internet's favorite arctic whale.