Obama and Romney meet at White House, plan to ‘stay in touch’

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WASHINGTON – Their relationship seemed doomed from the start. It was mostly a long-distance affair conducted in public exchanges, tempered by occasional awkward gestures of warmth but more often singed by open hostility. It most likely ended, mercifully, Thursday over white turkey chili and Southwestern grilled chicken salad.

President Barack Obama and the vanquished Mitt Romney ate lunch in a private dining room steps from the Oval Office, the seat of power they battled over for months, some might say years.

The meeting, a decades-old tradition between former rivals, put a bow on an otherwise ugly race marked by very few attempts to pretend the candidates liked each other. Until Thursday, that is, when a smiling Romney stopped by the White House. He left a little more than an hour later.

The lunch date was, perhaps not surprisingly, the winner’s idea. Obama announced his intentions in his victory speech, aiming to demonstrate bipartisan inclinations with the overture.

But the president, who never expressed respect for Romney’s political skills during the campaign, seemed to have trouble describing the purpose. Unlike some defeated candidates, Romney doesn’t hold public office and doesn’t represent a powerful constituency.

Obama suggested the former Massachusetts governor and business executive, who ran the 2002 Olympics, could act as some sort of efficiency consultant. “I do think he did a terrific job running the Olympics,” Obama said. “And that skill set of trying to figure out how do we make something work better applies to the federal government.”

The president, who once talked about building a “team of rivals” in his Cabinet, was not entertaining a Romney appointment, his spokesman later confirmed.

The White House offered only the broadest description of their conversation: “The focus of their discussion was on America’s leadership in the world and the importance of maintaining that leadership position in the future.” The meeting ended with a vague promise “to stay in touch.”

Unlike past post-campaign meetings, this one did not include a media photo op. The visual then, instead of unity or comity, was of a winner and a loser. Photographers snapped photos of Romney entering the White House from a side entrance.

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