Why mitt romney lost the election




















In Poland, Romney, stuck to the script, saying Russia was faltering in its transition to democracy, while hailing former Soviet satellite Poland as a beacon of freedom that the rest of the world should follow. In a speech in the library of Warsaw University, Romney named a number of countries he said were guilty of repressing democracy. The Kremlin has opposed the expansion of NATO into its sphere of influence and the West has accused it of mistreating political opponents. Romney had warm words for his host, Poland, evoking its struggles two decades ago to bring down the Iron Curtain.

They insisted it blunted the Romney momentum and had the election been delayed a week, they would win. Published On 13 Nov Mitt Romney has always been much more of a businessman than a politician. Here are the five reasons why Mitt Romney lost the presidential election: Inconsistency: No one knew what Mitt Romney really stood for. More from Features. COP Could oysters help to save Bangladesh from rising seas? Most Read. At COP26, nations strike climate deal that falls short.

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Best of the Web. When Veterans Come Home. Reviews Bookshelf. Some wondered aloud about the selection of Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin as Romney's running mate, suggesting that a Republican from a more winnable battleground state might have made a difference. GOP retains grip on House. Bob McDonnell would've been worth a point in Virginia. The Romney team and his super PAC allies, some Republicans are already saying, ran a banal series of television ads and allowed their candidate to be defined early on by Obama as an outsourcing plutocrat who wanted to let Detroit go bankrupt.

Their pushback seemed feeble for most of the summer and early autumn. And crucially, Romney never seemed to articulate a clear rationale for the presidency. The campaign's decision to air a misleading ad in Toledo media market about Chrysler moving Jeep production to China during the closing days of the race is also emerging as a prime reason for Romney's loss in the state he needed to win most. One senior Ohio Republican called the Jeep ad a "desperate" move and said the Romney campaign walked into a "hornet's nest" of negative press coverage.

Nick Everhart, a Columbus-based ad maker, blamed the Ohio loss, in part, on the Romney campaign's "poor media buying. But an adviser to one prominent Republican governor who campaigned for Romney said the campaign's problems were more fundamental. At no point did Romney give people any reason to vote for him, and so they didn't. Democrats keep control of Senate.

Romney may never have been the GOP's dream candidate, but even if he were, Republicans would still have been forced to confront another troubling structural problem on Election Day.

Democrats showed decisively that their ground game -- the combined effort to find, persuade and turn out voters -- is devastatingly better than anything their rivals have to offer. In , Republicans tapped the science of microtargeting to redefine campaigns.

That is now ancient history. The Romney campaign and the Republican National Committee entered Election Day boasting about the millions of voter contacts -- door knocks and phone calls -- they had made in all the key states.

Volunteers were making the calls using an automated VOIP-system, allowing them to dial registered voters at a rapid clip and punch in basic data about them on each phone's keypad, feeding basic information into the campaign's voter file.

But volunteer callers were met with angry hang-ups and answering machines just as much as actual voters on the other end of the line.



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