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Acting like a dweeble

Last Updated: 2:53 AM, November 2, 2011

Posted: 1:51 AM, November 2, 2011

headshotMichael Goodwin

Mitt Romney picked a rotten time to go wobbly.

With Herman Cain facing a crisis over sexual-harassment allegations and the rest of the GOP field stuck in reverse, Romney has a golden opportunity to build a commanding lead in the presidential primaries.

Instead, he has reverted to his old, tired self: hesitant, inconsistent, unclear and pandering to the latest fad.

The flip-flopper tag he earned four years ago is taking on new resonance.

Romney’s dithering, which includes ducking interviews, is wasting a crucial chance. The wild swings in the stock market and Europe’s begging China for a bailout throw a big dose of doubt into hopes the economy is rebounding. The new uncertainty and stubbornly high unemployment are tailor-made for Romney’s big advantage -- his successful background in both private business and government.

Yet even as President Obama flails about for a coherent message that doesn’t involve blaming everybody else for everything that’s wrong, Romney isn’t making progress. He can’t break 25 percent in the GOP polls and, more important, seems to have lost the steady confidence that made him the front-runner.

His recent wavering on cap-and-trade, his slobbering sympathy for the Occupy Wall Street vagabonds, and double-talk about an Ohio referendum on union powers all reinforce the narrative that he lacks convictions. In the zinger of the campaign, rival Jon Huntsman called him a “perfectly lubricated weather vane.” Ouch.

Obama’s team has noticed. It sees Romney as the most formidable challenger, so it is jumping on his mistakes to define him in ways that do some lasting damage.

Two Obama aides said Romney has “no core” and one added: “If he thought . . . it was good to say the sky was green and the grass was blue to win an election, he’d say it.”

The developments could be more than a bump in the road. Romney was always going to have a problem with conservative voters who don’t fully trust him even when he adopts their positions because of his occasionally liberal past.

But he usually polls best against Obama one-on-one because he is attractive to independent voters. That’s his ace, and he’s squandering it by looking meek.

Obama pulled 52 percent of independents in 2008 and they helped him win several swing states. These days, he gets about 35 percent, and a near majority say they will not back him again.

Beyond his moderate stances on social issues, Romney’s icy demeanor is also a plus. Obama is “hot” in the sense that he excites emotion and his policies are largely out of the mainstream.

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