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At His First Town Hall, Romney Faces Polite But Frustrated Crowd Demanding End To Shutdown

Senator Romney at a town hall.
Nicole Nixon
Sen. Romney addresses Davis County constituents at his first official town hall as a senator.

Sen. Mitt Romney faced tough questions on the government shutdown, border security and his vote to lift sanctions on a Russian oligarch on Tuesday night in his first official town hall in Utah since taking office earlier this month.

More than 250 Utahns packed into several rooms in the Davis County Administration Building in Farmington to hear Romney speak. The county, Romney noted, voted for him by the highest margin in the general election.

 

Despite the friendly territory, many of his new constituents demanded answers from the freshman senator about why portions of the government have gone unfunded and federal employees are still working without pay.

 

“In my opinion, it is wrong for people to be told, ‘You have to show up to work, but we’re not paying you.’ That’s simply wrong,” Romney said, adding that he would support legislation proposed by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., to pay federal employees who are required to work without pay during future shutdowns.

 

Romney blamed both President Trump and Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for the shutdown, but said Trump’s proposal for temporary protections for some undocumented immigrants “shows he’s willing to negotiate.”

 

If Pelosi doesn’t like the proposal, Romney said, she “can come back and say, ‘Well, here’s what I like better’ and then there can be more of a dialogue.”

 

Romney said the Senate would vote Thursday on two proposals to reopen the government, but he couldn’t predict whether either would succeed or not. One proposal includes money for Trump’s border wall, while the other, approved by the Democratic-controlled House, would fund the government while negotiations over border security continue.

 

Romney supports a barrier along the southern border but repeatedly lamented the fact that American citizens are paying the price for a disagreement over border security.

 

“People are being used as pawns in a political battle,” he said of workers and those receiving federal benefits which are now limited by the shutdown. “It is heartbreaking. I wish I knew what’s going to happen. I wish I knew when the government would open again and start writing checks to those who need them.”

 

Credit Nicole Nixon / KUER
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KUER
Romney speaks with a constituent after his town hall in Farmington.

Another constituent posed a question about why Romney voted to ease sanctions against companies tied to a Russian oligarch and Putin ally, Oleg Deripaska.

 

Romney called Deripaska a “bad guy” but said he voted with other Republicans to ease restrictions on his companies after he agreed to give up majority ownership.

 

However, a New York Timesreport this week finds that Deripaska, under the terms of the Treasury Department, is likely to benefit from the deal.

 

Ogden resident Pam Harrison was hoping to ask Romney whether he would support lowering marijuana from a Schedule I drug as more states including Utah move toward legalizing cannabis for medicinal use. She didn’t get the chance to ask a question, but Harrison said she had another reason to attend: supporting the thousands of federal workers who work in her community.

 

“The ripple effects are just starting,” she said. “It breaks my heart that people who are used to having their bills paid are having to decide whether to get their medications of pay their rent. I want federal workers to go back to work.”

 

Carla Caldwell, a Trump supporter, said she attended the town hall because she was upset by Romney’s recent op-ed questioning the President’s moral character.

 

“I can’t name a president that hasn’t done things that I would say are disgusting,” Caldwell said. “Every president, but they try to make it sound like Trump is the only one.”

 

She said she felt better after hearing Romney speak at the meeting.

 

“Is he the cheerleader for Trump? No, I know he’s not,” she said. “I just want him to make sure he represents me.”

Nicole Nixon holds a Communication degree from the University of Utah. She has worked on and off in the KUER Newsroom since 2013, when she first joined KUER as an intern. Nicole is a Utah native. Besides public radio, she is also passionate about beautiful landscapes and breakfast burritos.
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