Donald Trump Shrugs Off Mitt Romney's Attack on His Record
Donald Trump
has shrugged off a stinging personal attack on his presidency from senior
fellow Republican Mitt Romney.
Mr Romney,
who stood and lost for the Republicans against Barack Obama in 2012, suggested
in an article that Mr Trump was not fit to be president.
Mr Trump had
not "risen to the mantle", he wrote in the Washington Post.
The winner
of the 2016 presidential election hit back by tweeting, "I won big and he
didn't."
Mr Trump
drew a comparison with Jeff Flake, an outgoing Republican senator who also
attacked him last year.
But the
president sounded conciliatory, calling for Mr Romney to be a "team
player".
The timing
of the article, just two days before Mr Romney is sworn in as senator for Utah,
has prompted some to speculate he is positioning himself as a challenger to Mr
Trump for the Republican presidential nomination.
In the
article, Mr Romney praised many of Mr Trump's policies, such as his tax reforms
and appointment of conservative judges, and his crackdown on "China's
unfair trade practices" - polices which he said "mainstream
Republicans" had promoted for years.
But he went
on to say: "With the nation so divided, resentful and angry, presidential
leadership in qualities of character is indispensable. And it is in this
province where the incumbent's shortfall has been most glaring."
Mr Romney
said he would support the president in policies he thought were in the best
interests of Utah or the US but speak out against actions "that are
divisive, racist, sexist, anti-immigrant, dishonest or destructive to
democratic institutions".
"The appointment
of senior persons of lesser experience, the abandonment of allies who fight
beside us, and the president's thoughtless claim that America has long been a
'sucker' in world affairs all defined his presidency down," he wrote.
"Trump's
words and actions have caused dismay around the world."
The world
"needs American leadership", he argued, and "the alternative...
offered by China and Russia is autocratic, corrupt and brutal".
Ronna
McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republic National Committee and a niece of Mr
Romney, described her uncle's article as "disappointing and
unproductive".
Mr Trump's
manager for the 2020 presidential campaign went so far as to accuse Mr Romney
of jealousy.
Meanwhile,
the New York Times, the liberal daily regularly attacked by Mr Trump, commented
that much of the essay "sounded like the makings of a primary challenge
against Mr. Trump from Mr. Romney".
A
complicated one. During the 2016 campaign, Mr Romney said Mr Trump had neither
"the temperament nor the judgement to be president" while Mr Trump
called Mr Romney a "choke artist" and called his bid for the
presidency in 2012 "the worst ever".
The same
year though, the pair met for dinner amid reports Mr Trump was mulling
appointing Mr Romney as his secretary of state.
Mr Romney
has also taken issue with Mr Trump labelling the press the "enemy of
the people" as well as his response to a violent far-right rally
in Charlottesville.
When the US
Congress reconvenes on Thursday, Mr Trump faces a new challenge on the domestic
front - in November's mid-terms the Republicans strengthened their hold of the
Senate but lost the House of Representatives.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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