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Trump meets Romney for talks on envoy post

US president-elect decamps to his golf club for meetings and away from protests outside his New York building

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BEDMINSTER, USA // Donald Trump met yesterday with one of his most vocal Republican Party critics to sound him out as a candidate for secretary of state, as the president elect spent his first weekend outside Manhattan since his election. Meeting at a Trump golf course in New Jersey, Mr Trump sat down with Mitt Romney, now considered a long shot for the job of top US diplomat, a day after naming three polarising conservati­ves to fill key national security and judicial posts.

With about 15 senior positions in his cabinet still to fill, the real-estate billionair­e decamped on Friday night to the Trump National golf club Bedminster, a 90-minute drive from his 5th Avenue headquarte­rs at Trump Tower.

He will remain in Bedminster until tonight, far from the protesters besieging his New York City building. Mr Trump has not appeared in public since he gave reporters the slip to take his family to dinner in New York City on Tuesday. He has not spoken publicly since the broadcast of an interview on the 60 Minutes TV programme last Sunday, except for communicat­ing through his favourite media: Twitter.

It was on the social network that Mr Trump reacted yesterday to an out-of-court deal settling lawsuits that dogged his campaign over alleged fraud at his defunct Trump university training programme, for which he will pay former students US$25 million (Dh91.8m).

“I settled the Trump university lawsuit for a small fraction of the potential award because as president I have to focus on our country,” he tweeted.

The 45th president of the United States, set to take office on January 20, also tweeted criticism of the boos that greeted his vice president Mike Pence when he attended a performanc­e of the Broadway musical Hamilton. The cast also called for Mr Trump’s incoming administra­tion to work on behalf of all Americans.

“The cast of Hamilton was very rude last night to a very good man, Mike Pence,” Trump said. “Apologise.”

The Bedminster golf course is one of Mr Trump’s favourite sanctuarie­s, where he likes to spend weekends and where he prepared for campaign debates against his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

In addition to Mr Romney, he was expected to meet retired general James Mattis, a candidate for defence secretary; education secretary hopeful Michelle Rhee, a former head of public schools in Washington; and several business leaders including Lew Eisenberg, Andrew Puzder, Betsy DeVos and Todd Ricketts, the owner of the Chicago Cubs baseball team. Mr Romney – the failed 2012 Republican presidenti­al candidate – is a long-shot possibilit­y for secretary of state, along with former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani. Mr Romney would bring a more orthodox Republican worldview to foreign policy. He described Russia in 2012 as the main American geopolitic­al threat – a sharp contrast to Mr Trump, who has exchanged compliment­s with Russian president Vladimir Putin.

During Mr Trump’s campaign, Mr Romney described him as a “fraud”, rebuking the tycoon for proposals such as banning the entry of all foreign Muslims. Mr Trump also nominated anti-immigratio­n senator Jeff Sessions, one of his earliest supporters during the campaign, to be attorney general on Friday, showing he is prepared to take his hard line on illegal immigratio­n into the White House. To lead the CIA, he tapped hawkish congressma­n Mike Pompeo, a strident opponent of the Iran nuclear deal and a sharp critic of Mrs Clinton, when she was secretary of state, during hearings into the 2012 attack on the US mission in Benghazi, Libya. The incoming commander- in- chief also appointed retired Lt Gen Michael Flynn as his national security adviser.

A controvers­ial retired intelligen­ce officer, Mr Flynn, 57, has described Islam as a “cancer” and a “political ideology”. In February, he tweeted that “fear of Muslims is rational”.

He has also courted controvers­y for refusing to rule out “enhanced” interrogat­ion techniques such as waterboard­ing that have been described as torture and that Mr Trump has repeatedly condoned.

Mr Flynn’s appointmen­t does not require senate approval.

But that of Mr Sessions as attorney general does, and he has baggage: racially charged comments he made in the 1980s that cost him a chance for a job for life as a federal judge.

He also fiercely opposes immigratio­n, and waged war on efforts to pass comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform through congress in 2007 and 2013.

Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren called for Mr Trump to withdraw his nomination.

“Trump isn’t ‘ draining the swamp,’” she tweeted about his promise to sideline lobbyists and other insiders in Washington. “He’s inviting the biggest, ugliest swamp monsters in the front door.”

‘ Trump’s inviting the biggest, ugliest swamp monsters in the front door Elizabeth Warren US senator

 ?? Reuters ?? US president-elect Donald Trump and vice president-elect Mike Pence arrive at Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey yesterday.
Reuters US president-elect Donald Trump and vice president-elect Mike Pence arrive at Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey yesterday.

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