Will the 'Anglo-Saxon' controversy hurt Mitt Romney... or Obama?

The rival campaigns trade jabs over a quote attributed to an anonymous Romney adviser. Will either side score any political points here?

Mitt Romney speaks in New Hampshire on July 20: Romney's campaign quickly disavowed a comment made by an anonymous adviser that seemed to paint President Obama as out of touch with the U.S.-B
(Image credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Mitt Romney disavowed comments attributed to an unnamed adviser who, according to Britain's Daily Telegraph, said that President Obama doesn't "fully appreciate," as Romney does, the "Anglo-Saxon heritage" and "special relationship" that the U.S. and the United Kingdom share. "I don't agree with whoever that adviser is," Romney said in an interview with NBC News on Wednesday, the first day of a six-day foreign trip. Still, the comment was perceived as racist. The Obama campaign pounced, with an aide to Obama calling the remark "stunningly offensive," and Vice President Joe Biden accusing the Romney campaign of "playing politics with international diplomacy." A Romney spokesman said that Biden was diminishing the presidency and making Obama look desperate by using "an anonymous and false quote from a foreign newspaper to prop up their flailing campaign." Will the Anglo-Saxon "kerfuffle" wind up hurting Romney or Obama?

Romney can't dodge blame for this outrageous remark: Mitt can try to distance himself from the "Anglo-Saxon" comment all he wants, says Eleanor Clift at The Daily Beast, but it's no secret that he and his surrogates have been trying to paint Obama as un-American for weeks. Even though Romney promised not to attack Obama during this trip, "his advisers apparently felt free" to get in a jab "that could be interpreted as carrying a racial tinge." This "low blow" doesn't reflect well on Romney.

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