There is no doubt that the Republican presidential primary has been a slow implosion of the political right. Beltway common wisdom is that social conservatives hate Mitt Romney because of his seemingly inauthentic core values and repeated flip-flopping on virtually every issue, especially the all important "culture wars." This weakness has led to the parade of not-ready-for-primetime fringe characters who have risen and just as quickly fallen, like Michelle Bachmann, Herman Cain, Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, and now Rick Santorum. All have challenged Mitt Romney from the far right, leading to the myth of a "moderate Mitt."
Yet these weaknesses in Romney that have made him an easy target for challengers, his flip-flopping and malleability, are exactly what make him the most dangerous possible president in the race.
Romney very clearly changes his views on important issues depending on which way the political winds are blowing. His shifting stances can literally change the day, as we saw last week with his repudiation of the anti-contraception Blunt amendment which he then said he supported less than an hour later. It's the latest in what has become a political career full of taking both sides of issues, from healthcare mandates to women's rights to LGBT equality and many others. Romney says what he thinks will get him elected and what he thinks is the most popular view among the GOP.
And therein lies the danger of a malleable Mitt.