A new biography titled 'Romney: A Reckoning' sheds light on the state of American politics and the declining leadership of the Republican Party. The book explores Mitt Romney's career and his contempt for opponents within his party. While Romney is considered smart, he lacks the ability to connect with people.
A fantastic review of Mitt Romney's book -- and career -- by @MattWelch over at Reason. If you remember what I wrote back when the story just broke, well...we're pleasantly on the same page. https://t.co/PlUVT5wrDb
Mitt Romney isn’t really smarter than everyone. He’s smart, but not smarter than Bill Clinton, for instance. He lacks the ability to connect to people. Eg, calling corporations ‘people’ is true in a technical legal sense, like for IRS purposes. But normal folks don’t hear that.… https://t.co/6SsOdyiAFd
My favorite part of a recent biography of Romney: he spends a lot of time on how his opponents in the party are low IQ, short, and miserable because they're single and childless. A more secure conservatism would find such justified contempt endearing. https://t.co/sjTUDCNjfp https://t.co/6nNWI7RHKC
Mitt Romney, head case, narcissist https://t.co/7HK04uDv4l
“Romney: A Reckoning”, a new biography, illuminates how debased the leadership of the Republican Party has become—as well as the dismal state of American politics https://t.co/7ae9AqPQaW 👇