The Daily Telegraph

Romney could vote to remove ‘dishonoura­ble’ Trump from office

- By Ben Riley-smith US EDITOR

MITT ROMNEY has declined to rule out voting to remove Donald Trump from office if he is impeached, instead giving an excoriatin­g account of the US president’s personal behaviour and saying he will keep an open mind on the issue.

Mr Romney, the former Republican presidenti­al nominee now a senator for Utah, escalated his long-running clash with Mr Trump in a pair of interviews published over the weekend with the political website Axios and magazine The Atlantic.

Among the targets of Mr Romney’s criticism were Mr Trump’s hush money payments to Stormy Daniels, a porn star he is alleged to have had an affair with, the president’s rhetoric on race and the recent US troop withdrawal from Syria.

Mr Trump has always denied the Daniels affair.

The most eye-catching of Mr Romney’s comments came over impeachmen­t. The House of Representa­tives, controlled by the Democrats, is expected to vote to impeach Mr Trump before Christmas. It will then be up to the Senate, which is controlled by the Republican­s, to decide whether Mr Trump should be kicked out of office. Discussing the issue with Axios, Mr Romney said: “I just want to get as much informatio­n as we can, make an assessment consistent with the law and the Constituti­on.”

During that interview he called the Syria withdrawal a “very dark spot in America’s history” and said paying a porn star for relations outside of marriage was “not honourable”.

To The Atlantic, Mr Romney again did not rule out voting for removal, saying: “At this stage, I am strenuousl­y avoiding trying to make any judgment.”

Mr Romney seemed to acknowledg­e that history would judge how he and other senators acted, telling The Atlantic: “I [think] people will view this as an inflection point in American history.”

Around 20 Republican senators would need to flip and back removal for Mr Trump to go, something that seems unlikely, given that Republican voters overwhelmi­ngly are against removal according to polls.

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