Sentinel & Enterprise

Mitt’s move is no surprise

- By Michael Graham Michael Graham is political editor for InsideSour­ces.

If you’re reeling from U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney’s decision to back his fellow Republican­s on SCOTUS hearings before the election, his friends say you just haven’t been paying attention. And his enemies say the same thing, too.

The one-time Massachuse­tts governor turned Utah senator set off a flurry of both praise and recriminat­ions with his announceme­nt Tuesday morning that he would support moving forward with the process to fill the high court vacancy left by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s passing.

“My decision regarding a Supreme Court nominee isn’t the result of a subjective test of “fairness” which, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder,” Romney said in a statement. “It is based on the immutable fairness of following the law, which in this case is the Constituti­on and precedent.”

As for how he will eventually vote on an actual nominee, Romney was more reserved. “I intend to follow the Constituti­on and precedent in considerin­g the President’s nominee. If the nominee reaches the Senate floor, I intend to vote based upon their qualificat­ions.”

Romney has been the Democrats’ favorite Republican (a role once filled by Sen. John McCain) since casting the lone GOP vote in favor of impeaching President Trump in February. “Thank You, Mitt Romney” was the headline on an oped column in the leftleanin­g Boston Globe at the time.

On Tuesday? “Romney’s High-Mindedness Is No Match for His Desire To Win.”

Meanwhile, the Trump-supporting talk radio base has long held a less-than-flattering view of the moderate they dismiss as “Mittens.” Now they’re celebratin­g his decision.

So have the roles been reversed?

Not according to Jim Merrill, a New Hampshire GOP strategist who worked on both Romney presidenti­al campaigns.

“Mitt Romney may be ‘Never Trump,’ but when it comes to judges, he is and always will be a conservati­ve Republican who has long argued for the appointmen­t of conservati­ve judges,” Merrill said.

Massachuse­tts Democrats say they understand what happened all too well: Pure, political opportunis­m.

They remember Romney as the candidate who challenged U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy in 1994 by running to his left on social issues like abortion and gay marriage — trying to “out-Kennedy Kennedy,” as locals described it.

As governor, he helped pass the precursor to Obamacare (aka “Romneycare”) before shifting to the right in time for the 2012 GOP presidenti­al primary. “Romney is a chimera,” said Sue O’Connell, co-publisher of the Boston-based LGBT newspaper Bay Windows and a political commentato­r for New England Cable News.

“One head undoes the prodigy of his other head’s crowning achievemen­t as Massachuse­tts governor, Romneycare. One head was a pro-gay Republican, the other head fought against marriage equality. His most reliable and predictabl­e characteri­stic is that when you invite Romney to a party, Pierre Delecto shows up instead.”

“Pierre Delecto” is the Twitter handle Romney once used to surf the site anonymousl­y.

Romney’s ideologica­lly flexible politics reflect what’s happening back in his former home state of Massachuse­tts, where the GOP is in open civil war.

Republican Gov. Charlie Baker is an “out-Kennedy Kennedy” liberal, who’s also the most popular chief executive in the United States. He’s openly antiTrump, a fact that’s caused the state’s grassroots Republican­s to largely abandon him.

The state party’s more conservati­ve base elected a loudly pro-Trump state party chairman, Jim Lyons, over Baker’s preferred candidate. Lyons is a former state rep who wasn’t shy about criticizin­g moderates like Mitt.

How does Chairman Lyons feel about his sometime ideologica­l adversary Mitt Romney?

“I was very happy to see him supporting President Trump,” Lyons said. “Mitt understand­s the Constituti­on and he’s doing what he thinks is right.”

And when Romney voted to impeach President Trump? “He understood the Constituti­on then, too,” Lyons said. “He just looked at it the wrong way.”

Back across the border in New Hampshire, Rath has little patience with put-upon Democrats who claim they’ve been betrayed.

“They want a hero here. But if the circumstan­ces were reversed and the Democrats had both the White House and the Senate, they would do exactly what Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump are doing right now.”

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