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Romney says he'll 'stay quiet' on his 2020 presidential vote

Romney was the only GOP senator to support removing President Trump from office after the president's impeachment trial earlier this year.

WASHINGTON — Utah Sen. Mitt Romney on Monday became the latest prominent Republican to cast doubt on his support for President Donald Trump's reelection, saying he would “stay quiet” about whom he'll be supporting in November.

Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential nominee, told reporters on Capitol Hill that “I'm not going to be describing who I'll be voting for." His open acknowledgment of hesitance in supporting Trump comes after former Trump defense secretary Gen. James Mattis and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski aired criticism of the president's handling of ongoing protests against the police killings of black Americans.

In 2016, Romney said publicly that he would support neither Trump nor Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. He later said that he had cast his vote for his wife, Ann.

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Retired Gen. Colin Powell, who served as President George W. Bush’s secretary of state, took a stronger step away from Trump, telling CNN on Sunday that he would support presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden this November. Powell had said he voted for Clinton in 2016.

RELATED: Colin Powell says he plans to vote for Joe Biden

The relationship between Trump and Romney is acrimonious.

Romney was the only GOP senator to support removing Trump from office after the president's impeachment trial earlier this year. Trump has derided him as a “fool” and a “failed presidential candidate.”

After the senator attended a march for racial justice on Sunday, declaring that “black lives matter,” Trump tweeted sarcastically about Romney's “sincerity.”

Romney shrugged off that dig Monday, saying that Trump has “got time to do whatever he feels is appropriate” and that “I would presume” the president would consider supporting a police reform measure, given his public expressions of concern about the killing of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man, by a white officer in Minneapolis.

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