The Guardian (USA)

‘You have to run’: Romney urged Biden to take down Trump, book says

- Martin Pengelly in New York

On the night of the 2018 midterm elections, as a wave of anti-Trump sentiment swept Democrats to take control of the House, top Republican Mitt Romney urged Joe Biden to run for president.

“You have to run,” said Romney, the Republican presidenti­al nominee Biden and Barack Obama defeated in 2012, speaking to the former vice-president by phone.

The same night, Romney was elected a US senator from Utah, a post from which he would twice vote to convict Donald Trump in impeachmen­t trials.

Romney’s exhortatio­n to a man then seen as a likely challenger to Donald Trump in 2020 will probably further enrage the former president, his supporters and the Republican party they dominate.

The Biden-Romney call is described in The Long Alliance: The Imperfect

Union of Joe Biden and Barack Obama, a book by Gabriel Debenedett­i that will be published next week. The Guardian obtained a copy.

Describing how Biden spent 6 November 2018, Debenedett­i writes: “Biden spent election night glued to his phone as usual … He talked to most of the candidates he’d campaigned for, and plenty he didn’t, either to congratula­te or console them, or just to catch up.

“This time felt better than 2016” – when Trump beat Hillary Clinton for the presidency – “in part because Democrats were winning big, at least in local races and in the House.

“But it was also because of a refrain [Biden] kept hearing, and not always from the most expected sources.

“At one point he connected with Mitt Romney, who’d been easily elected to the Senate that night as a rare Trump-opposing Republican. They were warm as Biden cheered Romney’s win.

“Then Obama’s old rival got to the point: You have to run, Romney said.”

In a note on sourcing, Debenedett­i says his book is “primarily the product of hundreds of interviews” with “colleagues, aides, rivals, confidants, allies and eyewitness­es from every stage” of Obama and Biden’s careers since 2003.

He also says: “When someone’s words are rendered in italics, that indicates an approximat­ion based on the memories of sources who did not recall exact wordings.”

Romney’s opposition to Trump is long establishe­d, if not entirely consistent.

In 2016, the former Massachuse­tts governor spoke out against Trump, decrying his behaviour on the campaign trail and calling him a “phony” and a “fraud”. After the election, he said he did not vote for the Republican nominee, writing in his wife’s name instead.

Nonetheles­s, Romney then flirted with working for Trump, pitching to be secretary of state. He generally voted with his president after taking his seat in the Senate.

But the relationsh­ip was never smooth – Trump called Romney a “pompous ass” – and in 2019 Romney told the New York Times: “People say to me, ‘If you’re critical of the president you’re hurting the party.’ No I’m not – I’m laying out a path for the party post

the president.”

In 2020, when Trump was impeached for blackmaili­ng Ukraine for dirt on rivals including Biden, Romney became the first senator ever to vote to convict and remove a president of his own party.

He said he did not vote for Trump in that year’s election – but refused to say if he voted for Biden.

In 2021, Trump was impeached a second time, for inciting the Capitol attack. Romney voted to convict again.

 ?? Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP ?? Mitt Romney leaves the Senate chamber.
Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP Mitt Romney leaves the Senate chamber.
 ?? ?? Romney launches extensive attack on Trump: ‘A genius he is not’ – video
Romney launches extensive attack on Trump: ‘A genius he is not’ – video

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