Perhaps no criticism of Mitt Romney has been as potent as the observation that he sways with the political winds, choosing competing positions based on circumstances, not principles. Romney’s approach to the major issues of the day is a bit like the weather in Chicago: wait 15 minutes and you’re likely to see something new.
One does not get elected governor in Massachusetts and senator in Utah by being a model of consistency.
It’s therefore fitting to see the incoming Republican senator, on the eve of his taking the oath of office, adopt the latest in a series of postures toward Donald Trump.
In 2012, Romney welcomed Trump’s endorsement. Four years later, Romney delivered a blistering condemnation of Trump’s candidacy, telling voters, “Donald Trump is a phony, a fraud. His promises are as worthless as a degree from Trump University. He’s playing the members of the American public for suckers.”
Later that year, Romney changed his mind again when he auditioned to become Secretary of State (an opportunity Trump seemed eager to dangle, right up until he yanked it away). By early 2018, Romney accepted Trump’s endorsement of his Senate candidacy in Utah.
Evidently, now he’s a critic again.
Sen.-elect Mitt Romney wasted no time in the new year branding himself as a Senate maverick and a foe of President Donald Trump, saying in a blistering New Year’s Day essay that after nearly two years in the White House “the president has not risen to the mantle of the office.”
Romney, just two days from being sworn in as the junior Republican Senator from Utah, wrote in the Washington Post that Trump’s most glaring failure has been his inability to unite a “nation so divided, resentful and angry.”
“It is well known that Donald Trump was not my choice for the Republican presidential nomination,” Romney said. “After he became the nominee, I hoped his campaign would refrain from resentment and name-calling. It did not.”
I realize that folks like me tend to criticize Republicans for their stubborn silence about Trump, so it’s not altogether fair to disparage Romney for speaking up this way. With this in mind, I’m inclined to give the new Republican senator at least some credit for criticizing his party’s president. It’s far preferable to Romney adopting an embarrassing, Lindsey Graham-like posture.
But it’s also fair to say there are some notable flaws in Romney’s latest position.









