Did Donald Trump need an apology from Mitt Romney?
Story highlights
- Vice President-elect Mike Pence and Priebus also wanted Mitt Romney to apologize
- Romney got along well with Donald Trump in post-election meetings
Trump
was willing to move past Romney's bitter campaign-trail criticism of
him. And incoming chief of staff Reince Priebus, who chaired the
Republican National Committee during both men's presidential campaigns,
convinced Trump there was value in showing he was big enough to bring
Romney into the fold.
But
top aides, including Kellyanne Conway and Steve Bannon, saw Romney's
attacks as unforgivable, according to three sources close to Romney, two
of whom are familiar with Trump's transition process.
CNN
has learned that Vice President-elect Mike Pence and Priebus also
wanted Romney to apologize as a way to smooth over the tension.
After
Conway and others attacked Romney publicly
-- lobbying against his selection in television interviews -- and more
than a week after the two had begun talking, Trump raised the
possibility of a public apology with Romney as a way of mollifying those
critics, the sources said. He asked Romney to say publicly he was
"wrong" about Trump.
Trump
personally saw it in business deal terms: He would get the mea culpa he
sought from Romney; Romney would get the job he covets.
But Romney -- who titled his own book "No Apology" -- declined.
He
offered forward-looking praise for Trump -- starting with the
President-elect's election-night speech. But he wouldn't go backward and
retract his words from the campaign.
Eventually, Romney's critics persuaded Trump to look elsewhere, and on Monday he
tapped ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson as his nominee for secretary of state.
It
was the culmination of a selection process that looked like an episode
of "Celebrity Apprentice" -- with Romney, Tillerson, former New York
City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Gen. David Petraeus and Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker being paraded in and out of
Trump Tower as the President-elect narrowed his list.
Romney talks start after election
The
conversations between Trump and Romney began after the former
Massachusetts governor called Trump to offer his congratulations.
Trump
missed the call. Pence called back -- and then Trump did, as well.
Trump said Romney should come in to discuss a position in the Cabinet, a
source said. In Romney's conversation with Pence he said the only
position he was interested in was the top diplomat job.
Some
Republicans saw the conversations as Trump forcing a former foe to
grovel -- a move that would also undercut Romney as a future critic.
But Romney "never felt he was being played," a source said.
He
had told friends for years that he wanted to serve again, and the only
job he was interested in was secretary of state. He felt he was under
"serious" consideration from Trump as the two met twice in person and
spoke several times by phone.
"I
have a hard time believing that Trump expended all this energy and time
to simply tweak Mitt, and that Pence, Reince and others in the
President-elect's inner circle would play along," said Dan Senor, a 2012
Romney adviser who remains in close contact with him. "The press was
distracted by the theater of the public process, but behind the scenes
there were substantive conversations and meetings, which reflected a
serious hands-on process by the President-elect and his team; it was
impressive."
Trump -- who has a
history of striking business deals with one-time opponents -- was
"pleasantly surprised at how well the two men got along; was willing to
let bygones be bygones," a source said. He told others he was fond of
Romney.
"Mitt made it hard on him
because when they talked he really liked him," one source said. Trump
thought Romney was smart and "looked the part" of America's top
diplomat.
One source close to
Romney said it was clear Trump was serious about considering him. Even
when the selection process was dragging, the source said, Trump would
call Romney to check in.
"The idea that there was some grand design to humiliate him is ludicrous," the source said.
Trump's inner circle pushes for apology
A turning point came when Conway went on television to blast Romney.
After
that, more than once, Trump raised the prospect of a public apology
from Romney -- who in a speech in Utah had called Trump "
a con man, a fake and a phony"
who was "playing us for suckers," and had afterward attacked Trump on
Twitter and courted Republicans to launch a third-party campaign.
"It was clearly a sticking point and bothered Trump," a source said.
The
sources believe, though, that Trump wasn't asking for himself. He
wanted an apology from Romney to soothe over tensions within his own
camp.
Still, loyalty to Trump
hasn't led to jobs in every case. Giuliani, New Jersey Gov. Chris
Christie and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich were Trump's top
surrogates and close advisers during the campaign, and none have
received the posts they sought.
Not the only sticking point
Trump and Romney also faced another major divide: Russia.
The two men have polar opposite views: Romney believes Russian President Vladimir Putin
cannot be trusted or negotiated with; Trump strongly disagrees and feels he can make deals with Putin, the sources said.
The two were also divided on the United States' approach to NATO and the conflict in Syria, sources said.
"Mitt
hoped he could balance Trump out on these issues. In the end he knew it
would be Trump's decision, but he thought he could be an important
voice on the team to weigh in and balance him out on these particular
issues," one source said.
Romney
and Trump never came to terms over Russia. And in Tillerson, who is
friendly with Putin, Trump found someone closer to his worldview.
There
was one more factor weighing on Trump's mind as he considered Romney:
The former Massachusetts governor and 2012 GOP nominee was, as one
source put it, "an independent player with his own power base" who Trump
couldn't control.
If the two
disagreed, Romney could leave the administration and criticize Trump
publicly. Just as Romney hadn't helped Trump win the White House, Trump
wouldn't have elevated Romney's already-prominent national stature.
"He didn't owe Trump," the source said.
'He does not regret it at all'
Senor
said Romney doesn't regret going through Trump's selection process,
even though he didn't get the secretary of state's post.
"He
does not regret it at all," he said. "Romney has had his differences
with Trump, but now Trump is going to be president. And Mitt genuinely
believes that if he could help the president and serve the country, then
he has an obligation to do so."
"Every
decision that Mitt has made during this process has been
public-spirited," he added. "The political culture can at times leave us
all evaluating the motives of politicians through a very cynical lens.
But Romney was prepared to subject himself to this process because of
the country he loves and that he wants to serve. It's really that simple."
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