Romney Says Campaign ‘Doesn’t Need a Turnaround’
J.D. Pooley/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) -- Criticism of Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign, including by some Republicans, continued on Sunday even as the campaign promised changes and an effort to move on after a difficult week.
Romney is to start what aides call an “intense battleground state schedule” that will hit Colorado, Ohio and Virginia this week. But that wasn’t enough to quiet some Republican commentators.
“Their core problem was carefulness, inability to focus on their own essential meaning. And communicate it to the American people,” said Wall Street Journal Columnist Peggy Noonan on CBS’ Face the Nation.
David Brooks, who writes for the New York Times, added on NBC’s Meet the Press: “Mitt Romney does not have the passion for the stuff he is talking about. He is a problem solver. I think he is a non ideological person, running in an extremely ideological age, and he is faking it.”
Despite these calls for change, the candidate says he has a “very effective campaign.” And when Romney was asked Sunday on CBS’ 60 Minutes whether he can turn around his campaign, he was dismissive.
“Well, it doesn’t need a turnaround. We’ve got a campaign which is tied with an incumbent president to the United States,” Romney said.
The latest Gallup tracking poll does show Romney tied with President Obama nationally, but his campaign admits he is not leading in any of the battleground states that could decide the race.
That fact -- and the Republican criticism -- led ABC's George Stephanopoulos on Sunday to ask Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus on This Week whether Romney is in denial.
“No, I don’t think so, George … I think that we had a good week last week, I think in retrospect, in that we were able to frame up the debate last week in the sense of, what future do we want and do you want out there,” Priebus said.
Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio





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