The Guardian (USA)

‘Ha, ha, ha’: Mitt Romney laughs off Trump’s ‘total loser’ attack

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Confronted with Donald Trump’s abuse, the Utah senator and former Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney said: “Ha, ha, ha. He’s such a whack job.”

Romney’s view of the former president and current Republican presidenti­al frontrunne­r was communicat­ed to McKay Coppins, author of a new biography, Romney: A Reckoning, written in co-operation with its subject.

Romney once flirted with joining Trump’s cabinet but has since emerged as a chief antagonist, voting to convict at both Trump’s impeachmen­t trials.

Earlier this week, responding to reporting about Coppins’ work, Trump called Romney “a total loser that only a mother could love”, erroneousl­y said the senator “just wrote a book”, and said it was, “much like him, boring, horrible, and totally predictabl­e”.

Trump also claimed to have forced “this left-leaning Rino [Republican in name only] out of politics”, a reference to Romney’s announced retirement next year.

On Thursday, Coppins spoke to Brian Stelter, the former CNN anchor now host of Inside the Hive, a Vanity Fair podcast.

Coppins said: “I sent [Trump’s] statement to Mitt and … I’ll just pull up the text. He wrote back, ‘Ha, ha, ha. He’s such a whack job.’ So Mitt kind of enjoyed Trump’s response.”

Coppins also discussed how he came to write Romney’s biography – in part because, as he writes in his book, Romney decided not to write a traditiona­l memoir.

Coppins said: “When I first approached him, it was just a couple months after January 6. I remember our first meeting was in his Senate hideaway, which is this little cramped windowless room that the senators get near the chamber in the Capitol building. And there was still barbed wire fence around the building because the riots had just happened.”

On 6 January 2021, Trump sent supporters to the Capitol to block certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s election win. They failed but nine deaths have been linked to the riot, including law enforcemen­t suicides. Thousands have been arrested and hundreds convicted, some for seditious conspiracy.

Coppins said Romney’s “initial decision to cooperate with this book was just born of … extreme frustratio­n and

disappoint­ment with the leaders of his party and fear for the country. I think he thought of this book as a warning.”

Trump faces 91 criminal charges, for state and federal election subversion, retention of classified informatio­n and hush-money payments. He also faces civil threats including a fraud trial regarding his business and a defamation trial arising from a rape allegation a judge called “substantia­lly true”.

Nonetheles­s, he leads by huge margins in national and key state polling regarding the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Coppins told Stelter that Romney was now “looking back at the moments in his pursuit of the presidency that he sort of flirted with the more extreme elements of his party.

“I think he realises now that the mistake he made, and the mistake that a lot of the Republican establishm­ent made, was thinking that they could basically harness the energy of the far right without succumbing to it.”

In 2012, Romney accepted Trump’s endorsemen­t.

“He wishes he didn’t do it,” Coppins said. “And I think that that’s emblematic of a lot of these these small ethical compromise­s that he and a lot of his party leaders made, not realising the kind of Pandora’s box they were opening.”

 ?? ?? Mitt Romney with fellow senators Pete Ricketts, Tim Scott and John Barrasso. A new biography of Romney has just been published. Photograph: Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/Shuttersto­ck
Mitt Romney with fellow senators Pete Ricketts, Tim Scott and John Barrasso. A new biography of Romney has just been published. Photograph: Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/Shuttersto­ck

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