Marin Independent Journal

Romney, outspoken about GOP, weighs reelection run

- By Michelle L. Price and Mary Clare Jalonick

>> He twice voted in favor of convicting former President Donald Trump in impeachmen­t trials. He excoriated his fellow senators who objected to certifying the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. He even scolded New York Rep. George Santos for his audacity in grabbing a prominent seat at the State of the Union address after admitting to fabricatin­g much of his biography.

After four years in Washington, Republican Mitt Romney has establishe­d himself as a rare senator willing to publicly rebuke members of his own party.

But the Utah senator's outspoken stances, along with his willingnes­s to work with Democrats, have angered some Republican­s in the deep-red state he represents and led them to cast about for someone to try to dethrone him a primary race next year.

The 75-year-old said that he hasn't made a decision on whether to run for reelection in 2024 and doesn't expect to until the start of summer.

“I'm sort of keeping my mind open,” Romney said in an interview. “There's no particular hurry. I'm doing what I would do if I'm running with staffing and resources, so it's not like I have to make a formal announceme­nt.”

His decision about whether to run again comes as Trump is making his third campaign for the White House, presenting Romney an opportunit­y to continue to serve as a chief foil to the former president.

But that could also sustain the backlash Romney has faced for serving as a check on Trump, including being heckled at the airport, narrowly avoiding censure by the state GOP and becoming an insult that other Republican­s use to slam their rivals as suspect: “A Mitt Romney Republican.”

Romney said he didn't know if the prospect of Trump becoming the Republican presidenti­al nominee was something that would spur him to run for reelection run or stay out. But he said it was among the the things he would be weighing, along with personal considerat­ions regarding his wife, Ann Romney, and family, and his goals for what he wants to accomplish in the Senate.

“We'll look and see what happens in the rest of the Republican landscape and the national landscape, the presidenti­al race and the other Senate races,” he said. “There is just a lot of elements that I will ultimately take into account. But I haven't begun that process yet.”

Romney has earned a reputation for bipartisan­ship, from his role helping broker a sweeping 2021 infrastruc­ture law with Democrats to his being one of only three Republican­s to vote to confirm President Joe Biden's nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson as a Supreme Court justice. He helped negotiate legislatio­n to protect samesex marriages in December by demanding language ensuring that the rights of religious institutio­ns would not be affected. And he joined 14 other Republican senators in supporting a sweeping gun control measure last summer in the wake of mass shootings.

“I didn't come to the Senate to just fight and lose,” Romney said. “I came to actually fight and win. And I fell in with a group of Republican­s and some Democrats who felt the same way and wanted to work together on issues of significan­ce for the country and for our respective states.”

But what garnered Romney

heavy booing two years ago and a near censure from the Utah GOP was his vote in 2020 that made him the first senator in U.S. history to vote to convict a president of his own party in an impeachmen­t trial. Romney voted to convict Trump on House charges that he had abused his power by urging the president of Ukraine to investigat­e then-candidate Biden. He voted to acquit on a separate charge that Trump had obstructed the impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

Romney did it again in the weeks after the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, becoming one of seven Republican­s to vote to convict Trump of incitement of insurrecti­on.

Stan Lockhart, a former chair of the Utah Republican Party, said that while Romney's votes in the impeachmen­t trials drew a “huge negative outpouring,” he thinks that, nearly two years later, some of the support for Trump has softened and the hostility has “mellowed.”

“I think there are people today that were not big fans of Mitt Romney after that impeachmen­t vote who like him better today,” Lockhart said.

Romney said he doesn't have a measure of whether the backlash has eased, but said he was following an oath he took “to apply impartial justice.”

“People elect you and then you follow your conscience,” he said. “It would be sad if people who got elected to office tried to calculate their decisions based upon how popular it was at home. They have to do what they feel is absolutely right and then live with the consequenc­es of that.”

No GOP challenger has stepped forward to run against Romney, but several prominent Utah Republican­s are seen as potential candidates and at least one major conservati­ve group is looking at spending in the

race.

The anti-tax group Club For Growth, which used the phrase “Mitt Romney Republican” in attack ads in 2022, said the Utah Senate race is one where its political super PAC could likely get involved, throwing heft behind a conservati­ve challenger.

“Even if he stays, I think there's a desire among conservati­ves to have a real choice in Utah,” said Club For Growth President David McIntosh. “If somebody steps forward and is a credible candidate, we would definitely take a look at that.”

Former U.S. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who gained the national spotlight leading the House Oversight committee through aggressive investigat­ions of Hillary Clinton, said he is considerin­g a campaign.

“I do think about it. It's not something I'm working on,” Chaffetz said in an interview. “It's something I don't think I need to decide right now and consequent­ly I haven't.”

He declined to say whether he thinks Romney is vulnerable but said, “I don't think anybody should ever assume that they will continue to be there in perpetuity.”

Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes, a Republican and staunch Trump ally, is

among those seen as a potential challenger. Reyes' longtime political consultant Alan Crooks told the AP last year that Reyes was getting pressure to run and was well-positioned but wouldn't say if he would launch a campaign.

The Western state allows candidates to secure a spot on the primary election ballot by collecting voter signatures — something a wellfunded or popular candidate can generally do with ease — or by winning the support of 4,000 conservati­ve-leaning delegates at the state GOP party convention.

Romney is unlikely to win the support of delegates — he didn't in 2018 — and the impeachmen­t votes made it worse.

“Trump is still very popular among the base,” Utah GOP Chair Carson Jorgensen said. “Many Republican­s felt it was a waste of time and taxpayer dollars to vote for impeachmen­t.”

In a primary election, where a larger pool of more moderate and independen­t Republican­s cast ballots, the race is seen as Romney's to lose.

Romney, the former governor of Massachuse­tts, had long been among the most popular figures in Utah by the time he moved to the state after his unsuccessf­ul 2012 presidenti­al campaign.

A Brigham Young University graduate, Romney was brought on to help the 2002 Winter Olympics in Utah, turning the games that had been overshadow­ed by a bribery scandal into a successful showcase for the small Western state. As the Republican presidenti­al nominee a decade later, he became the most visible member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints, a faith to which more than half of Utah residents belong.

The church's culture of decorum made the state a place where Trump, with his brazen personalit­y and comments about women and people of color, initially received a chilly reception, losing the state's 2016 caucuses.

Romney that year delivered a scathing speech against Trump, deeming him a “fraud” who was unfit to be president, but later warmed to him and accepted his endorsemen­t during his Senate campaign.

Kirk Jowers, the former chairman and general counsel of Romney's leadership PACs who remains in touch with Romney, said he has positioned himself at the center of much of what goes on in Washington and probably feels “that he has an incredibly important role to play in our state's and our country's and his party's affairs.”

“I think it would be incredibly difficult for him to walk away from that role as things stand right now,” Jowers said.

Romney said he found it “fun” to get things passed in Washington but said he doesn't “understand someone who just wants to stay in the Senate.”

“I had a life before I came here, and I'll have a life after I go,” Romney said. “And I came to actually do things and I've been part of a group that allowed me to do that.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah greet each other at the Capitol in Washington on April 5.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah greet each other at the Capitol in Washington on April 5.

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