How Many Romney Aides Does It Take to Screw in a Light Bulb?

On to Poland, where one of Mittens’s aides lost his cool and told the press corps to kiss his ass. And that was one of the better moments for the Romney campaign.

Mittens got an endorsement from Lech Walesa, but the Solidarity organization let it be known in no uncertain terms that Mitt is not their guy.

Upon Romney’s visit to the Gdansk shipyards, the site of historic Polish worker strikes during the Soviet era, Solidarnosc issued a press release saying it is “in no way involved” in the Romney meeting with Walesa and had no “initiative” to invite the American candidate to Poland.

The union expressed dismay at Romney’s anti-union stances in the U.S., saying it would stand alongside the AFL-CIO, the American labor federation that has endorsed Obama and remains highly critical of Romney.

“Regretfully, we have learned from our friends in the American trade union central AFL-CIO representing over 12 million workers about Mitt Romney’s support for the attacks against trade unions and labor rights,” Andrzej Adamczyk, the head of the union’s international department, wrote. “In this respect, I wish to express… our solidarity with American workers and trade unions. [Solidarity] will always support the AFL-CIO in their struggle for the right of workers to organize and bargain collectively.”

Meanwhile, the fallout from Israel continues. Erud Barak spoke out and said President Obama has been as supportive of Israel as a U.S. president could be, in spite of what Mittens says.

See also Mitt Should Have Stayed Home and Whiplash-Mitt Romney Lavishes Praise On Israel’s Socialist, Government Controlled Healthcare System.