Romney’s challenge: Be more than the anti-Obama

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ATLANTA (MCT) — Day after day, Mitt Romney sketches a bleak portrait of America under President Barack Obama and vows to dismantle his programs. Romney would undo Obama’s health care overhaul, scrap Obama’s plan to scale back the military and lift Obama’s restraints on banks and Wall Street investment firms — to name a few.

But apart from casting himself as an all-around anti-Obama, Romney has offered scant evidence of a distinct positive message to capture his vision for leading the country.

The absence of any strong sense of what a Romney presidency would mean for the nation is an important part of a larger challenge that he faces: to connect with the many Americans who have been reluctant to embrace his candidacy.

Campaigning on a snowy morning last week in Colorado, Romney summed up his core message at a rally in an RV warehouse, and it was not about himself. It was about Obama: “This has been a really failed presidency,” he said.

Aside from promising to lance Obama’s policies, Romney conveyed little about how he would govern, relying instead on abstract pledges to stand up for freedom.

Romney’s effort to contrast himself with Obama is born of political necessity, as the first hurdle for any candidate challenging an incumbent is to show that failure has opened the door to a change in the White House. (So too are his frequent attacks on GOP rivals Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich, since he must dispatch them to gain the nomination.)

Complicating Romney’s message is a central tenet for Republicans this year: that the size and scope of government should shrink. Democrats have succeeded in past elections by selling a raft of programs to expand government services. But building a vision on cutbacks has required a deft touch.

Ronald Reagan, a president often cited by Romney as a model, pulled that off in 1980, offering a positive argument that blended both confidence and optimism.

Reagan framed his campaign to oust Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter around themes of hope, leadership and national strength at a time of economic stagnation and the protracted humiliation of the Iran hostage crisis.

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