Trump riding high
PRESIDENT Donald Trump basked yesterday in a Republican victory in a closely-watched election in Georgia, telling cheering supporters at a campaign-style rally in Iowa that “the people love us.” The congressional election had been widely cast as a referendum on the young administration as it battles a swirling Russian scandal and a string of legislative setbacks — and the president seized on the result as a vote of confidence.
“We won last night,” he told the crowd in Cedar Rapids.
“All we do is win, win, win!” Establishment Republican Karen Handel defeated Democratic novice Jon Ossoff after what turned into the most expensive congressional race in history, retaining a seat her camp has held since 1979 — and calming party jitters about the impact of the president’s troubles on local and national politics.
“The truth is, the people love us,” Trump crowed to the Iowa gathering. After wins in South Carolina, Kansas and Montana, Trump’s Republicans have now won all four special elections held since his inauguration in January, leaving Democrats demoralised as they seek to snatch control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections.
“They thought they were going to win last night in Atlanta,” Mr Trump jeered at the Democrats. “They spent close to $30 million on this kid!”
The Republican Party interpreted the results as a sign Mr Trump’s core supporters remain faithful despite turbulence in Washington: no major legislative achievements to date, a White House mired in scandal over the probe looking into possible collusion between Mr Trump’s campaign and Russian election meddling, and potential obstruction of justice by the president himself.
Hammering home his campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again,” Mr Trump reprised his key campaign themes: defending American borders, repealing the Obamacare “disaster,” promising record tax cuts — and touting “the amazing progress that we have already made.”
Promising once more to erect a wall on the Mexican border, he raised the possibility of building it with solar panels — an idea he reportedly floated earlier this month — using the energy thus generated to help cover construction costs.
“Pretty good imagination, right? My idea,” he quipped.
On Capitol Hill, the Republican win in Georgia may indeed embolden the party to press ahead with Mr Trump’s political agenda, notably reform of Barack Obama’s health care law and an overhaul of the tax code.
The Senate’s Republican leadership said it will unveil today a new health Bill.
The legislation faces unanimous opposition from Democrats and scepticism from some Republicans, including several senators, who have voiced concern about the secrecy of the drafting process.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has insisted he wants a vote on the Bill by June 30.