Romney Plays Dumb with Contraceptive Bill Flip-Flop

Senator Roy Blunt's bill to exempt employers from providing contraceptives serves no other purpose other than giving politicians on both sides something to point to when November's election rolls around. Mitt Romney, for one, was "too confused" to take advantage of the opportunity. As Reuters notes, the Blunt Bill is largely expected to fail when the Senate takes up the measure Thursday. But that doesn't mean that it isn't an underhand pitch to politicians to appeal to their bases by either championing women's rights or claiming that the nation is slipping away from religious liberty. Mitt Romney, like most of his GOP counterparts, probably should have gone with the latter. "I’m not for the bill," Romney told an Ohio news station on Wednesday, according to The New York Times.  "The idea of presidential candidates getting into questions about contraception within a relationship between a man and a women, husband and wife, I’m not going there."

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Now, championing someone's private right contraception isn't a bad thing, but Mitt wasn't exactly towing the party line. The Times' Michael Barbaro and Erik Eckholm note that his comments raised "furor" and report that "Mr. Romney and his aides quickly corrected his remarks, saying he strongly supports the Senate amendment, and had not properly understood the question."   

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It wasn't just Republicans who noticed the change up. "It took little more than an hour for him to commit his latest flip-flop. Even worse, he ended up on the wrong side of an issue of critical importance to women," said Stephanie Cutter, Obama's deputy campaign manager told Reuters, adding that Romney's remarks "showed why women don't trust him for one minute."