Team split over Mitt Romney getting top job
Palm Beach: As families across a bitterly divided America gathered for Thanks
giving, a battle erupted on Thursday in Donald Trump’s camp over his pick for secretary of state, with loyalists seeking to block the path of Mitt Romney, a fierce former critic of the billionaire.
With the President-elect hunkered down at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida for the holiday weekend — from where he urged the country to unite after a “painful” campaign — his team appears split over the prospect of making Mr Romney, the Republican Presidential candidate in 2012, America’s top diplomat.
Some of Mr Trump’s staunchest supporters have united to oppose naming a man who called the real estate magnate a “fraud” and a “conman” during the campaign, when he helped lead the party establishment’s drive to sideline him.
But the other leading choice for top diplomat, outspoken former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani — one of Trump’s loudest supporters from early in his campaign — has drawn scrutiny for business dealings that could pose conflicts of interest.
“I am working hard, even on Thanksgiving,” Mr Trump tweeted on Thursday, saying he was seeking to persuade an Indiana air-conditioning company, Carrier Corp, to remain in the United States.
But his transition team said there will be no new cabinet announcements until at least Friday. Despite his lack of experience in foreign policy, Mr Giuliani, 72, has openly lobbied for secretary of state, telling Trump’s advisers he is interested in no other position, news sources said. However, Mr Giuliani’s candidacy has drawn attention to business dealings with foreign governments that may rule him out.
Picking Mr Romney —who lost the White House race to President Barack Obama four years ago — would reassure the Republican establishment and US allies worried about Trump’s foreign policy. But the businessman and former Massachusetts governor who savaged Mr Trump’s candidacy during the campaign also publicly differs from him on Russia, a leading foreign policy challenge.
While the president-elect has praised President Vladimir Putin, promising to improve strained relations with Moscow, Mr Romney has called Russia America’s “number-one geopolitical foe.”
Former House speaker Newt Gingrich, a staunch Trump supporter expressed skepticism that Mr Romney would represent “the kind of tough-minded, America-first policies that Trump has campaigned on.