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US Senator Mitt Romney won’t seek re-election, marking end of wild ride through Republican politics

  • The Utah lawmaker, a 2012 presidential nominee and rare Trump critic within his party, will retire as a one-term senator when his term ends in early 2025
  • His decision effectively surrenders his Senate seat to a successor who could be more closely aligned with the ex-president and other conservative hardliners

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US Senator Mitt Romney answers questions in his office on Wednesday after announcing he will not seek re-election. Photo: AFP

US Senator Mitt Romney will not seek re-election in 2024, capping a roller-coaster ride through Republican politics from the height of his party’s 2012 presidential nomination to the depths of tribal warfare in the age of Donald Trump.

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Casting aside the hopes and appeals of colleagues, including Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, the 76-year-old Utah Republican said he would retire as a one-term senator when his term ends in early 2025, rather than seek another six years among a dwindling number of Republican moderates in Congress.

Romney stood out within his caucus as a rare critic of former US president Trump, but his decision to retire effectively surrenders his Utah Senate seat to a successor who could be more closely aligned with Trump and the hardline conservative politics of the state’s other US senator, Mike Lee.

Romney nonetheless said he believed it was time to go.

“At the end of another term I’d be in my mid-80s. Frankly it’s time for a new generation of leaders,” Romney said in a video statement released on Wednesday. “While I’m not running for re-election, I’m not retiring from the fight.”

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