Trump attacks 'pompous' Mitt Romney after senator's rebuke

Image: Mitt Romney
Senators Mitt Romney and Ron Johnson attend a a special Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental affairs hearing on "The State of Homeland Security after 9/11" at the National September 11th Memorial & Museum on Sept. 9, 2019 in New York Cit Copyright Drew Angerer Getty Images
By Phil McCausland with NBC News Politics
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"He is a fool who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats," Trump said of the Republican senator.

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President Donald Trump attacked Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, a member of his own party, after Romney called Trump's appeals to Ukraine and China to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son "wrong and appalling."

Trump claimed in one tweet Saturday that he had heard that there are people in Utah who regretted voting for Romney, who won an open Utah seat for U.S. Senate in 2018 with nearly 63 percent of the vote. Prior to the general election, he won the Republican primary by nearly 40 points.

Romney, a former governor of Massachusetts, was the Republican nominee for president in 2012. He lost to then-President Barack Obama.

Trump on Saturday appeared to call for Romney's impeachment as senator, using a hashtag in all capital letters.

"He is a fool who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats," Trump tweeted.

In a subsequent post, the president retweeted a Fox News correspondent's posing the question of whether Romney would serve as the new Jeff Flake in the Republican Party. Flake, who served as a senator from Arizona until 2018, was a critic of Trump.

"Jeff Flake is better!" Trump said in response to the tweet.

Trump began his attacks on Romney earlier on Saturday with tweets in which he called Romney "a pompous 'ass' who has been fighting me from the beginning" and said Romney could have won the 2012 election if he "worked this hard on Obama."

"Sadly, he choked!" the president wrote.

Trump's broadsides came a day after Romney tweeted that, "By all appearances, the President's brazen and unprecedented appeal to China and to Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden is wrong and appalling."

The Republican senator also mocked Trump's insistence that he is motivated by concerns about corruption.

"When the only American citizen President Trump singles out for China's investigation is his political opponent in the midst of the Democratic nomination process, it strains credulity to suggest that it is anything other than politically motivated," Romney wrote.

Politics

Trump was asked by a reporter earlier Friday if he had ever asked "foreign leaders for any corruption investigations that don't involve your political opponents."

"You know, we would have to look," Trump answered.

The barrage of tweets by Trump and Romney's comments on Friday come amid an impeachment inquiry that House Democrats opened into whether Trump used the office of the president inappropriately to pressure Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

Biden is a Democratic frontrunner for the 2020 election.

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