Romney considers 3rd presidential run
Former governor may face competition from Jeb Bush
WASHINGTON— Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney told several donors Friday he’s seriously considering a third run for the White House, a move that surprised his most loyal supporters and former staff after months of insisting his career in politics is over.
Romney, who ran unsuccessfully against President Barack Obama in 2012, attended a private gathering of donors at the New York offices of Woody Johnson, a leading Romney donor in 2012 and owner of the New York Jets football team, several people with direct knowledge of the meeting told The Associated Press.
All spoke under condition of anonymity, as they were not authorized to speak publicly about the private discussions.
The meeting was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. A spokesman for Romney did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The news about Romney comes as former Florida governor Jeb Bush marches swiftly toward a 2016 bid of his own, which threatens to win much of the support from the Republican establishment that fuelled Romney’s last campaign. Bush has spent recent weeks hosting private fundraising meetings across the country and is courting top talent to staff a potential campaign.
Should Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts who made millions in private equity, follow through and enter the race, he would hardly be a lock to win his party’s nomination for the second time. He would join a field expected to feature more than a dozen Republicans with legitimate White House resumés, sitting governors and U.S. senators among them.
“Mitt has been a terrific leader for the Republican Party, but if he runs again, he’ll have to earn it again,” said veteran Republican operative Phil Musser, a former Romney supporter. His firm is already handling preliminary campaign work for Jeb Bush.
In contrast to the Republicans, the Democrats have a clear early frontrunner for the nomination in former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton, even though she has not yet announced her intention to run.
Some were caught by surprise when Romney suggested he was considering a 2016 campaign after months of public denials. Others asked Romney what he would do differently after a 2012 campaign in which he struggled at times to connect with middle-class voters.
Toward the end of the hour-long session, Romney told his one-time allies they should tell their friends that a Romney 2016 campaign is under serious consideration, according to one person in the room.