By Susan Davis
August 24, 2017
Escalating
tension between Capitol Hill and the White House is threatening the GOP's
legislative agenda and testing the bonds of party unity under the Trump administration.
An unscripted and angry President Trump
unloaded on Congress at a campaign rally in Phoenix, leaving lawmakers
increasingly apprehensive about the party's ambitious fall agenda that includes
an overhaul of the entire federal tax code.
Instead of hammering that message, the
president used his bully pulpit to criticize Republicans for failing to pass a
long-promised health care bill to dismantle the Affordable Care Act.
"Obamacare is a disaster and think —
think! We were just one vote away from victory after seven years of everybody
proclaiming 'repeal and replace!' One vote away!" Trump said, in reference
to Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who cast the decisive vote in the Senate.
Trump did not name McCain, who is undergoing
treatment for brain cancer, but his intention was clear.
"It's disappointing is probably the most
nice thing I can say about that," Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., told CNN in
response to Trump's comments about McCain.
Trump also implicitly attacked Arizona's
junior senator, Jeff Flake, who has been one of the party's most vocal Trump
critics. The president said Flake is "weak on borders and weak on
crime" and that "nobody knows who the hell he is."
The president called on the Senate to end the
chamber's defining characteristic — the filibuster — in order to lower the
threshold for most legislation from 60 votes to 51 and force his agenda through
Congress. There is bipartisan opposition to doing so in the Senate. The health
care bill failed in July despite being produced under a process that required
only 51 votes.
Trump even threatened a government shutdown
in September if Republicans don't deliver him a spending bill that includes the
money he wants to start building a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.
"Now the obstructionist Democrats would
like us not to do it, but believe me, if we have to close down the government,
we're building that wall," Trump said, to a cheering crowd in Arizona,
just hours after visiting a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol facility. Speaking
to reporters on Air Force One on Wednesday, White House press secretary Sarah
Huckabee Sanders said that Trump "has definite plans to make sure that it
gets built," but would not reiterate the shutdown threat.
At a Wednesday event in Oregon to promote
upcoming tax legislation, House Speaker Paul Ryan was instead forced to answer
questions over whether Republicans are going to shut down the government.
"I don't think anyone is interested in having a shutdown. I don't think it
is in our interests to do so," Ryan told reporters.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell tried to tamp down on reports that he and the president are at odds
and have not spoken in weeks.
In a statement on Wednesday, McConnell said
he is in "regular contact" with Trump about their "shared
goals" that include tax, infrastructure and defense bills, as well as
plans to fund the government and raise the debt ceiling, the nation's legal
borrowing limit needed to pay the nation's bills.
"We have a lot of work ahead of us, and
we are committed to advancing our shared agenda together and anyone who
suggests otherwise is clearly not part of the conversation," McConnell
said.
The White House responded with a similar
statement, saying the two men "remain united on many shared
priorities." Still, Trump sent tweets critical of McConnell and Ryan on
Thursday morning.
Sanders
was asked about the
New York Times report of McConnell expressing doubt that
Trump can salvage his presidency, and whether being so tough on Senate
Republicans is the right approach. She told reporters traveling with Trump on
Wednesday, "I think everybody knows this president isn't somebody who
backs down, and if he thinks that you need to lean in a little bit, he
certainly will."
But
what's also clear is that if Trump continues to provoke Republicans — like he
has by suggesting he could support an opponent to Flake in his Senate GOP
primary — that will put him firmly at odds with McConnell. The Senate GOP
campaign operation as a matter of policy supports all of its incumbents for
re-election, and Flake is widely seen as the best candidate to keep Arizona a
GOP-held seat. This week, the Senate Leadership Fund, a superPAC close to
McConnell, ran a digital attack ad against a GOP candidate opposing Flake
whom Trump has voiced support for.
It's also clear that frustrations are rising
over the August break because of the president's ambiguous response to the
racist violence in Charlottesville, Va., as well as his continued inability to
focus his message to promote the GOP plan to overhaul the tax code.
Democratic opposition, meanwhile, has
deepened, and as a result lowered the already dim prospects for bipartisanship.
A group of House Democrats has introduced a
censure resolution — or formal rebuke — of the president for his handling of
Charlottesville. At least 78 Democrats have signed on as co-sponsors. Also in
August, Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee became the third Democrat to formally
call for moving forward with articles of impeachment against Trump.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer have already said they oppose GOP efforts to
include money in a pending spending bill to pay for a border wall. Pelosi
reiterated that opposition Wednesday.
"President Trump's multibillion-dollar
border wall boondoggle is strongly opposed by Democrats and many Republicans.
Democrats will stand fast against the immoral, ineffective border wall,"
she said in a statement.
Congress returns Sept. 5, and there are only
12 legislative days that month to find at least short-term solutions to keeping
the government open and raising the debt limit.
Republicans are increasingly candid about
their apprehension about what is to come this fall.
"[The president's] hands, at the end of
the day, are going to be driven by what the Legislature does or does not do, and
you better find a way to work with them because at the end of the day they can,
again, stymie your efforts or they can actually move them forward," Rep.
Mark Sanford, R-S.C., a former governor, told CNN. "And so it's a real
problem from the standpoint of him advancing his legislative agenda."
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