The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
Two words leaped to mind just before Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, announced that he would vote to convict President Donald Trump on one article of impeachment: frog’s legs.
Frog’s legs were on the menu as then-president-elect and Romney dined at Jean-Georges, a high-ticket eatery inside the (where else?) Trump Hotel in November 2016. After having refused to endorse Trump and calling him unworthy of the Oval Office, Romney nonetheless publicly auditioned for the prestigious secretary of state post.
It was a public humiliation for Romney, the GOP 2012 nominee, who had to eat swamp meat and his own words while cameras and social media captured the humbling moment for all the world.
The frog’s legs supper let some of the air out of Romney’s sanctimony tires.
Trump had reason to want to bring the former Massachusetts governor down a notch. In February 2012, Trump endorsed Romney, who was a bit ambivalent about the whole exercise. At the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, Romney offered, “There are some things that you can’t just imagine happening in your life.”
Four years later, Romney refused to repay the favor. In March 2016, he tried to stop Trump in an address that labeled the frontrunner “a phony and a fraud.” Romney even tweeted, “If Trump had said four years ago the things he says today about the KKK, Muslims, Mexicans, disabled, I would NOT have accepted his endorsement.”
Not only was Romney willing to forget Trump’s unworthiness after Trump won in 2016, but also he accepted Trump’s endorsement in 2018 when he ran for Senate in Utah.
There are those who say Romney turned on Trump out of envy because the one-time reality TV star succeeded in 2016 where the former Massachusetts governor failed four years earlier. But I suspect a big factor may have been that Trump made Romney tap dance in front of the world — that he could forgive Trump winning but not Trump playing him for a position Romney would never get.
Romney’s revenge is a dessert best served cold. After trying to get on the Trump team, he is about to become the conscience of anti-Trump Washington. Romney gave an interview to Fox News’ Chris Wallace, who asked for a sense of how difficult the decision to vote to convict Trump was. “Do what is right, let the consequence follow,” Romney replied, citing a favorite hymn. He believed Trump was guilty of abuse of power and that he should be removed from office — so he had to follow his conscience.
I believe Romney. I just wonder where his conscience was when he tried to get into Trump’s cabinet and when he accepted Trump’s endorsement. Wallace was agog about how “lonely” Romney will be. After all, the conservative confab CPAC disinvited Romney from its convention later this month.
Yes, it’s going to be very lonely as establishment Washington hails Romney for his rectitude and looks down the nose at those grubby Republicans who didn’t stand up to Trump because they lacked the courage. It doesn’t occur to swamp denizens that there actually were reasons to vote against removing Trump. Such as the punishment doesn’t fit the crime or merit overturning the will of American voters.
There’s a lesson in here somewhere.
Maybe it’s that Trump’s my-way-or-the-highway approach may make most Republicans hesitate before they cross him, or even so much as criticize him. But Trump’s willingness to bully dissenters has limits.
It can’t work with everyone. Romney, 72, is not up for election until 2024. He may not want the job by then, and by 2024 opposing Trump may not hurt at the Utah ballot box. In the meantime, Romney will be living proof that a Republican with the right resources can stand up to Trump and survive.
He’ll do more than survive. He’ll thrive. Romney will be the toast of Washington, not the guy who lost in 2012. In a moment of triumph, Trump could have spared Romney the humiliation of practically begging for a seat at his table. And now the tables have turned.
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