McCain’s latest
ad makes use of Romney’s remarks that foreign policy isn’t
essential. Here is the actual response from Romney on
Hannity and Colmes:
“ROMNEY: Well, if we want somebody who has a lot of experience
in foreign policy, we can simply go to the State Department and
pluck out one of the tens of thousands of people who work there.
They, of course, have been doing foreign policy all their careers.
But that’s not how we choose a president. A president is not a
foreign policy expert. A president is a leader who understands how
to make difficult decisions and does so in a way that brings
together the best voices, that considers the upsides and downsides
and predicts the credibility and the strength that America has
always projected in circumstances like this. One of our great
foreign policy presidents was Ronald Reagan, who even though he had
not spent years in the Senate, understood a vision of what we had
to do to overcome the greatest threat of the last half of the last
century, and was able to bring together the various experts and the
various viewpoints and sort them through and take action that led
America to be successful in that great — that great challenge that
we faced then. So the kind of experience you want is someone who
knows how to make difficult decisions, to bring together the right
people that consider the various options that you have, and then to
act with strength and resolve.”
At the time of the Romney appearance I and others commented that
the Reagan analogy was a faulty one. By 1976 Reagan has spent
nearly two decades writing and speaking about communism, the
greatest challenge of our time at that point in history.
Meanwhile, Romney has already started his summary/positive ad
cycle in NH with a rather standard forward looking spot.
(The message in a way in the flip side of McCain’s argument. Romney
says forget about the past and instead look ahead.) Will he have to
double back now to go after McCain? UPDATE: The McCain team makes
the point on Romney vs. Reagan in this memo.