President Trump went to Utah on Monday. The official purpose of his trip was to announce the reduction of two national monuments in the state, though he could have signed those orders in the Oval Office.
But the journey west may have served a political purpose for the president — to keep a political rival out of Washington.
Trump said on Monday that he hopes seven-term Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch stays in the Senate "for a very long time to come." Hatch is 83 years old, and according to someone familiar with his thinking he would indeed like to retire. Hatch's wife wants him to retire. But Donald Trump does not want him to retire because of the person who would most likely replace him: Mitt Romney.
Trump had hours to persuade Hatch to run again while on Air Force One flying back and forth from Washington. Trump also made time to lavish praise on Hatch. "You are a true fighter, Orrin," he said at the beginning of a speech on the national monuments.
Utah
polls show
Now that Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., are retiring, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is gravely ill, Romney would also become the de facto head of the non-Trump Republicans — although not necessarily the anti-Trump Republicans.
Romney was very tough on Trump during the campaign. He called him "a phony, a fraud" in
a major speech
Since then
Romney has only criticized Trump
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