Mitt Romney may or may not be selected as Donald Trump's secretary of state. But Romney has already performed a valuable service for Trump – by proving him right, about Romney, and about the broader political class. Romney is according extraordinary deference and respect to a man he famously labeled "a phony, a fraud" just months ago. "He continues with a message of inclusion and bringing people together," Romney said moments after cameras captured a pained smile at dinner with Trump. Trump can now be nice to a man he once said wasn't very smart, now that Romney has eaten crow along with his frog legs. But it leaves Romney where Trump suggested he belonged from the start: as a politician whose words don't really matter. If Romney's words from the campaign had meaning, how could he be swayed by the words Trump has uttered, or even his early actions, now? Trump's rise was powered by his big called bluff on the political process – that he always knew voters think politicians' words had no real meaning. Romney surely has the best of intentions in wanting to help and to serve the next president. But he is making Trump seem more right by the day.
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