Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Why America needs Mitt Romney as Senate candidate

- Dana Milbank Columnist

Mitt Romney: Your country needs you.

The 2012 Republican presidenti­al nominee has been reluctant to announce a primary challenge to Sen. Orrin G. Hatch of Utah, the longest-serving Republican senator in history. But America needs Romney to step up, to restore dignity to the Senate — and to save the country from the embarrassm­ent Hatch has become.

Hatch, long the picture of conservati­ve rectitude, was once a conscienti­ous legislator, even partnering with Ted Kennedy when he thought poor kids were getting a raw deal.

But Hatch, the Senate president pro tempore, has undergone a grotesque transforma­tion this year, his 84th on earth and 42nd in the Senate.

He has become chief enabler of and cheerleade­r for President Trump.

“You’re one heck of a leader,” Hatch gushed to Trump on the White House lawn this month, hailing “all the things that he’s been able to get done — by sheer will, in many ways.”

Hatch, declaring Trump a man “I love and appreciate so much,” urged his colleagues to “get behind him every way we can” and vowed: “We’re going to make this the greatest presidency that we’ve seen, not only in generation­s, but maybe ever.”

Yep, that’s Trump: topping not just Ronald Reagan but Abraham Lincoln and George Washington.

This isn’t about ideology. The trouble is Hatch’s slavish devotion to Trump, kowtowing even when the likes of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan express misgivings. Yes, Romney briefly had kind words for Trump when Trump was considerin­g him for secretary of state. But Hatch’s nonstop adulation of Trump legitimize­s the president’s vulgarity and attacks on democratic institutio­ns.

Consider Hatch’s applause for Matthew Petersen, one of three Trump judicial nominees who withdrew this month amid doubts about their credential­s.

The patently unqualifie­d Petersen, who has never prosecuted or defended a case, was humiliated during questionin­g by Sen. John Neely Kennedy, R-La., who exposed his ignorance of basic courtroom procedures. And Hatch? He scolded his fellow Judiciary Committee members for being “unfair.”

Contrast that with Hatch’s silence last year when Todd Edelman, nominated to the same seat as Petersen in the U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia, waited eight months without even getting a hearing — an insult endured by many nominees, right on up to Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland. Edelman, whom I first met in college years ago, had spent six years presiding over some 400 cases as a judge on the D.C. Superior Court, served eight years as a public defender and taught law at Georgetown.

Hatch for many years has been the compassion­ate champion of the CHIP health-care program for poor kids and the importance of legislatin­g protection­s for the “dreamers,” immigrants brought to the country illegally as children. But those sensibilit­ies faded in the Trump era.

The lapsed CHIP program now hangs by a thread, and while Hatch says he favors renewing the program, he frets that “we don’t have money anymore.”

This as he helped push through a $1.5trillion tax cut paid for with debt. And the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program for dreamers?

He urged Trump not to end the program, and when the administra­tion set in motion plans to do just that, Hatch didn’t join GOP Sen.Lindsey O. Graham’s bipartisan effort to codify it, instead signing on to a GOP-only alternativ­e.

Hatch was preparing to retire, but Trump pushed him to go back on his promise not to seek another term. Trump obviously prefers the obsequious Hatch to Romney, who, though as conservati­ve as Hatch, would be no puppet.

That’s why Mitt must run.

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