Not quite my point, yes his party dragged him down but that was more about weakening his chances of becoming President. If he won, the Tea Party couldn't make him do shit. I see Mitt in much the same light as Malcolm Turnbull, a sort of urbane social progressive who believes strongly in the free market, nobody in his party gets along with him much but because he's so gifted he managed to persuade them to give him a go but only at a time when the party was in dire straits so he never really had much chance of winning.
it blows my mind that someone like you, lentern, could ever hold romney in such high esteem, no less liken him to malcolm turnbull. i really don't get it. or i do, i guess. its all mythological. there's this story of romney the caterpillar who we all thought was supposed to metamorphosise into a beautiful butterfly but, alas, somewhere, something went wrong. the caterpillar was poisoned and came out a dirty moth instead. the party dragged him down, it wasn't his fault.
is mitt romney is a good bloke or not? very few people are privy to such information. no one really knows whether the party and circumstances truly ruined him, or whether it is he who is ruinous. indeed, we have good reason to suspect the latter. sure, you might say that, as governor of massachussetts, as the story goes, his reign was moderate and bipartisan, and embodied the sensible, modern politics that we should all aspire to. well to this story i say cool, brah, but who the hell thinks any other sort of republican would have ascended to the office of a new england governor in the 21st century in another way? no one, not you nor i, knows which is the real mitt; the left mitten, governor romney, or the right mitten, presidential hopeful romney... but it seems the only real difference is that, as governor, he didn't have the track record; he couldn't be called a flip flopper. but romney was playing the long game, always shooting for the white house. by 2004 he knew that new england wasn't going to take him there. he changed tack. no more mitt playing the middle. romney rolled right, and left his massachussetts office with a shocking approval rating - 37% - and a demos that loathed his increasingly judicious use of the veto to obstruct progressive policy, such as stem cell research among other things.
of course, there was a time before politics - you know, when romney was the pirate sailing the private equity seas, enjoining the most vile of corporate raids. from this one susecpts that he's not free-market loving at all. in fact, he's the opportunist who abritraged inequities and inconsistencies in the law and leveraged the old boy network to gut companies for personal gain, not to engender the optimal allocation of resources like a 'free marketeer' might (unconsciously) do. not that i might not have done the same, but that's not the point; no one knows can say with a shred of certainty whether romney is the moderate, the bipartisan, the "urbane social progressive who believes strongly in the free market", the bridge builder, or rather the despicable homonculus that ran for president. yet the evidence seems quite to always favour the contrary. romney is less cicero, more constantine; rather a rootless opportunist, as power hungry and detached as the rest of the glutinous american bourgeoisie that too often see politics as a sport - big game.
rather than being the teflon president he surely modeled himself after, romney is the play-dough non-president. his political handlers have shaped and moulded him in the forms they comport to be best, and he has only been too willing. because, for romney, it's always been about the long game; not to lead the free world, or to have a 'new vision for america' (i'm sure everyone is tired of new visions) but to bag a truly rare beast, the most prized real estate in the world: capitol hill.
tl;dr romney is the whore of babylon.