Romney’s comments on Olympics rally proud Brits

LONDON (AP) — Mitt Romney may be just what the London Olympics needed.

In little more than 24 hours in London, the U.S. presidential candidate has gotten Britons to stop complaining about bumper-to-bumper traffic, cringing about cost overruns and fretting about shoddy security — and instead start taking pride in their country’s long-awaited day in the sun.

From Prime Minister David Cameron to ordinary Londoners rushing to work, Britons recoiled at the visiting American’s suggestion that the logistical problems encountered so far were “disconcerting.” Many who have themselves been slamming organizers as incompetent, and the massive competition as an expensive fiasco, are suddenly rallying around the flag.

“Mitt the Twit” screamed Friday’s headline in The Sun, which just days ago was trumpeting an embarrassing incident in which an official bus carrying the U.S. team from Heathrow airport got lost and spent hours in traffic.

“Who invited party-pooper Romney?” asked the Daily Mail.

“Nowhere Man” declared the more reserved Times of London, a reference to a biting comment by the famously diplomatic Cameron, who implied that Romney lacked the experience to offer advice to one of the world’s great capitals since the Olympics he helped organize in Salt Lake City, Utah, took place “in the middle of nowhere.”

“We are holding an Olympic Games in one of the busiest, most active, bustling cities anywhere in the world. Of course, it’s easier if you hold an Olympic Games in the middle of nowhere,” Cameron said.

Colorful London Mayor Boris Johnson also got in on the act, using Romney’s criticism as a rallying cry to stoke up a crowd of tens of thousands gathered at Hyde Park on Thursday night: “There’s a guy called Mitt Romney who wants to know if we are ready. Are we ready? Yes, we are!”

Residents learned of Romney’s comments from friends, television and social media. And the fact the Republican presidential candidate spent hours trying to dial back his dig with more positive statements seemed to win him little favor.

“What would he know?” asked Londoner Liudmila Troshina, wearing a Team Great Britain jersey and posing for pictures along with her husband in Piccadilly Circus. “I don’t really care what people from other countries think about us because I take my information firsthand — from people who live here.”

“No matter what some man said, we are prepared … to support our country, our city and our sportsmen with everything we have,” she added.

Those sentiments are a quick about-face from the weeks of moaning many Britons have engaged in prior to the games, which begin with the opening ceremony Friday night.

For months, the nation has been awash in complaints — from taxi drivers angry over special traffic lanes for Olympics VIPS, to slack-jawed travelers staring down long lines at immigration, to commuters apoplectic about being asked to rethink their journey to avoid the crush of Olympic tourists, to residents alarmed that surface-to-air missiles have been placed on their roofs to fight terrorism.

Even the heavens have come in for a browbeating, with the Times of London publishing an editorial recently demanding an end to weeks of rain.

“It is a British sport,” Labour lawmaker David Winnick told The Associated Press on Friday. “We always complain.”

He should know.

One of the iconic images of London’s troubles was Winnick’s cutting exchange with the head of the G4S security group earlier this month after the company failed to provide enough Olympics workers, forcing the British military to step in.

“It’s a humiliating shambles for the country, isn’t it?” Winnick demanded of Nick Buckles after the CEO offered a groveling mea culpa on live TV, repeating the charge until Buckles could not deny that it was.

But even Winnick winced when he heard what Romney had to say.

“These are internal matters that would be well dealt with under our own democratic system,” he said. “There is a feeling, and I’m sure it applies in the United States, that … families can quarrel bitterly in private, but should anyone from the outside have a go, the family is united. In other words: ‘Mind your own business.'”

Mower County

Crime Victim Resource Center hoping for more visibility in move to main Mayo campus

Local Government

County wins Food Drive Competition over the City with check donation

Agriculture

More farmers sought for prairie strips

Mower County

Second public meeting slated for one-way project

Education

Riverland to host Rural Healthcare Panel Discussion at Albert Lea Campus

Mower County

Convictions: Nov. 27-Dec. 4

Mower County

Preventing falls during the holiday season

Business

Business Brief: Medgaarden’s Southwest Sales is first employer offering health insurance with HELPcare

News

LGBTQ+ activists in Minnesota want prosecutors to treat the killing of a trans woman as a hate crime

Mower County

In Your Community: Duplicated Bridge

Education

Education Briefs

News

Deer hunters in northern Minnesota lash out against wolves, DNR

News

Woman charged with attempted arson of Martin Luther King Jr. birthplace in Atlanta

News

Iowa pilot flying again after waterfowl crashed through windshield of his helicopter

News

A St. Paul police officer, suspect injured in a shooting

News

Troops round up Palestinian men in northern Gaza as UN warns aid operation is ‘in tatters’

News

US employers add a solid 199,000 jobs and unemployment falls, signaling a still-sturdy labor market

Austin Packers

Austin wrestlers drop two in Rochester

Mower County

Page Turners to take readers on a quest with this year’s City Wide Read selection

Mower County

Photos: Holiday Train pulls into Austin hauling holiday cheer

News

Centenarian survivors of Pearl Harbor attack are returning to honor those who perished 82 years ago

Local Government

City Council approves moving final 2024 tax levy forward at Truth and Taxation meeting

News

Las Vegas sheriff says at least 3 victims in university campus shootings, though conditions unknown

Mower County

HI scientists take part in study investigating antibody that could neutralize poliovirus