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Mitt Romney has a secret Twitter account named “Pierre Delecto”

The former presidential hopeful is secretly fascinating.

Carrying his suitcase, Senator Mitt Romney departs down the US Capitol steps.
Carrying his suitcase, Senator Mitt Romney departs down the US Capitol steps.
Carrying his suitcase, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) departs the US Capitol following a vote on the budget agreement on August 1, 2019, in Washington, DC.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Utah Senator, former presidential candidate, and Trump critic Mitt Romney can now claim another title: person with an alternate Twitter account he uses to “Like” tweets featuring, say, surfboards with the Mitt Romney 2012 logo emblazoned upon them or to respond to tweets about his strategy regarding President Donald Trump.

The revelation of Sen. Romney’s alt-account came courtesy, in part, of an interview conducted by the Atlantic’s McKay Coppins. In response to a Trump tweet demanding the senator’s impeachment (which would be hindered by the fact that, historically, members of Congress are immune from impeachment), Romney told Coppins that he follows political Twitter in his own way:

He explained that he uses a secret Twitter account—“What do they call me, a lurker?”—to keep tabs on the political conversation. “I won’t give you the name of it,” he said, but “I’m following 668 people.”

That level of specificity — 668 Twitter accounts is a very particular number of accounts for one to follow, especially when he outlined several of the types of people he followed — helped Slate’s Ashley Feinberg locate Romney’s account. Which is @qaws9876, user name “Pierre Delecto.”

Romney used the account to occasionally reply to tweets that reference himself, like this tweet located by Feinberg in which Romney responds to a critique from Fox News host Brit Hume.

From @qaws9876, located by Ashley Feinburg.
From @qaws9876, located by Ashley Feinburg.

But he also used the account the way many of us would: to “Like” tweets that said nice things about him, like this one.

In a phone call with Coppins, Romney confirmed the account belongs to him in perhaps the most Romneyian of ways: en français. Romney served his Mormon mission in France, spending 30 months evangelizing beginning in 1966.

Obviously, the internet responded to Feinberg’s revelation with glee, much like the time earlier this year when Romney blew out the candles on the birthday cake given to him by his staff (one made out of Twinkies, his favorite) by taking each birthday candle off the cake individually and blowing them out one by one.

That glee will likely be short-lived, however. The Twitter account has, regrettably, been made private. Nothing gold can stay, it seems.

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