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Romney takes an unexpected London walk

Avoiding a traffic jam, Mitt Romney walks down Grosvenor Place in London to meet Ireland's Prime Minister Enda Kenny in London on Friday, July 27. AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

(CBS News) LONDON - Just one day after the British media took him to task for suggesting that England's preparation for the Olympics had been "disconcerting," Mitt Romney on Friday unexpectedly found himself in a position to help prove his point.

Rather than directly confront one of the biggest concerns expressed about the Games -- the ensnarling traffic -- Romney skipped the motorcade and ended up walking to a meeting with Ireland's prime minister at the Irish embassy here.

(Mitt Romney opts to avoid London's Olympics traffic.)

Surrounded by his security staff and several aides, Romney blended in with the locals and thousands of visitors arriving to take part in the Games. He did occasionally shake the hands of passersby who recognized him.

"Good to see you," said one man in a shirt that said Hawaii on the back who stopped the presumptive Republican nominee.

Romney -- who is almost never late --arrived only a few minutes after his meeting with the Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny was scheduled to start. As they greeted each other in front of the media, Kenny asked the presumptive Republican nominee about his stroll.

(Romney arrives in London for Olympics.)

"Not bad at all," Romney replied. "I enjoyed the walk." In what was perhaps an effort not to further antagonize his host country, he added: "I guess we didn't 'have' to walk, it's enjoyable to walk. It's a beautiful day."

Romney's son Tagg saw fit to tweet about the traffic. "Jen, Craig, Mom stuck in London gridlock," he wrote. "But the cabs here are so cool."

Later, he wrote that he ended up opting for the London subway: "Me and uncle scott heading onto the Tube. Our van couldn't make it to Olympic park despite 4 hour head start."

British officials have been warning London residents about the coming traffic congestion for some time, advising those who live outside of the city to stay there throughout the duration of the games.

(London reacts to Romney's comments on Olympics security.)

"The reality is that there is going to be disruption," the spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron warned earlier this week. "We have huge numbers of people coming to London to enjoy the Olympic Games and that will put pressure on the transport system."

At Romney's meeting with Kenny, Romney and the prime minister privately discussed the economic issues facing Ireland and Europe and the "pro-business" reforms that Ireland has put in place, according to a Romney adviser.

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