The Republican Party's 2012 nominee predicted who the GOP will choose in 2028. Outgoing U.S. Senator and 2012 GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney said he expects Vice President-elect JD Vance to carry the torch for the GOP after President-elect Donald Trump finishes his second, and last, presidential term.
Sen. Mitt Romney predicts that Vice President-elect JD Vance will become the Republican Party's 2028 presidential nominee.
Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has revealed who he believes is destined to lead the GOP into the next election in 2028. In an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper on State of the Union Sunday,
Sen.-elect John Curtis wants Trump to be “wildly successful," but he made it clear there will be times that he disagrees with Trump’s approach.
When Mitt Romney joined the Senate in 2018, he was mostly seen as a mainstream Republican. Now, with his one and only term coming to an end, the 77-year-old isn’t sure what the future holds for his party.
Common ground among Americans is shrinking by the minute. It's a challenge we are sadly less able to confront with Romney and others like him gone from public service.
Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) said Sunday who he believes the next GOP presidential candidate will be when the 2028 elections begin. Republicans have become the “party of the working-class, middle-class voter,
Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) predicted that Vice President-elect JD Vance succeed Donald Trump in 2028 as the GOP nominee because "MAGA is the Republican party." The post Mitt Romney Predicts JD Vance Will Be GOP Nominee In 2028 — Declares ‘Trump Is The Republican Party’ first appeared on Mediaite.
The two parties clash over areas of former consensus, even as they reach detente on issues that defined the polarizing 2004 and 2012 elections.
When Romney was elected to the Senate in 2018, advocates were excited about what he could do in his new role. During his two failed presidential bids — as a candidate in 2008 and the GOP nominee 2012 — he’d acknowledged human contributions to climate change when few others in his party would.
His office was almost packed up when we spoke, but behind him, leaning against the wall, were two pictures of his dad, George Romney, who was governor of Michigan from 1963 to 1969, and ran for president in 1968. The man who defeated him, Richard Nixon, made Romney the secretary of Housing and Urban Development during his first administration.