Cape Breton Post

DEMOCRATIC HOUSE WIN POSES CHALLENGES FOR TRUMP

- BY JONATHAN LEMIRE Follow Lemire on Twitter @JonLemire

A measured outreach for bipartisan legislatio­n. An aggressive campaign to define and demonize new congressio­nal committee leaders. The rise of a new foil for President Donald Trump to attack.

With Democrats seizing control of the House, Republican­s for the first time in the Trump era will no longer hold sway in all branches of the federal government. The new, split reality that Washington woke up to on Wednesday poses stark challenges for the White House, but also presents some political opportunit­ies. Aides had been quietly prepared for this outcome for weeks and will now kick into overdrive before the new Congress takes office in January.

The first move likely belongs to Democrats. With their takeover of the House fuelled by anti-Trump energy coursing through their supporters, Democrats now face expectatio­ns from their constituen­ts to torment Trump, using their newly acquired power of the subpoena to launch a series of investigat­ions into matters like the president’s business dealings and potential Cabinetmem­ber corruption while also trying to unearth Trump’s tax returns.

There also could be pressure to impeach Trump, though chances of removal from office by a Republican-controlled Senate are remote. The president welcomes that fight.

“If the Democrats think they are going to waste Taxpayer Money investigat­ing us at the House level, then we will likewise be forced to consider investigat­ing them for all of the leaks of Classified Informatio­n, and much else, at the Senate level,” Trump tweeted Wednesday. “Two can play that game!”

It was unclear what leaks he was referring to.

As polls showed for months that the Democrats were likely to flip the House, covert work began in the West Wing to prepare for a new, more contested chapter of the Trump presidency. Though no formal war room was establishe­d, senior aides convened meetings to map out the administra­tion’s strategy for combating newly emboldened Democrats. Trump himself at times took part in informal conversati­ons about the future, according to two senior White House officials not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

The central strategy: play defence by going on offence and turning the public against Democratic investigat­ions by painting the probes as overreach designed to cause gridlock.

West Wing aides are bracing for a number of investigat­ions, including probes into whether Trump’s business was profiting off his presidency and looking at his administra­tion’s move to separate migrant children from their families. Turnover in the White House counsel’s o ffice — Don McGahn has departed and his replacemen­t, Pat Cipollone, has not started yet — has slowed some planning for how to confront legal challenges. But politicall­y, West Wing aides and outside surrogates will make the case that the Democrats are abusing the power of the subpoena, a task that began as the votes were still being tallied late Tuesday.

“I don’t know that there will be much of an appetite for Democrat lawmakers to spend all of their time, or most of their time or even a fraction of their time, investigat­ing, instigatin­g, trying to impeach and subpoena people,” Kellyanne Conway, a senior Trump adviser, told reporters on the White House driveway. “You have to really give the voters what they want.”

Republican­s will surely make likely House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a target of their ire, and Trump didn’t waste time noting Wednesday that Pelosi in the speaker’s job could be good for Republican political prospects. If restive House Democrats “give her a hard time, perhaps we will add some Republican votes. She has earned this great honour!” Trump said in a tweet.

Beyond Pelosi, the GOP also will run aggressive ad campaigns and unleash talking-point attacks against the committee leaders who will run the probes. Those potentiall­y include Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York atop the Judiciary Committee and Elijah Cummings of Maryland, incoming chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

One of the senior West Wing aides said the White House goal will be to make those congressio­nal leaders “famous for all the wrong reasons.”

Trump himself will likely get involved, assigning derogatory nicknames while savaging them on Twitter, the aide said. The Democratic-controlled chamber will also provide a foil for Trump, who is at his most comfortabl­e when he has a natural opponent.

The White House also could attempt to link the Democratic investigat­ive efforts - particular­ly if they prove unpopular - to the party’s presidenti­al candidates, the aides said. Democrats, emboldened by their victory and rising momentum, feel confident they can withstand the White House assaults in order to weaken the president before his re-election bid kicks into high gear.

Newt Gingrich, a Trump ally who served as House speaker during Republican efforts to investigat­e and impeach President Bill Clinton, urged the White House to co-operate with Democratic probes — but ever so slowly.

“The White House should drag it out, bog it down, take the momentum away and make it go on forever,” said Gingrich. He also encouraged conservati­ves to foster what he believes would be counterpro­ductive impeachmen­t talk among Democrats. “Make it the speaker’s problem, make her deal with the nutty wing of her party.”

Some in Trump’s orbit would relish an impeachmen­t battle, pointing to how the 1998 battle backfired on Republican­s. They were seen as overreachi­ng, and that helped boost Clinton’s poll numbers.

Gingrich added that Trump should “spend 2019 governing” and that includes trying to work with Democrats on certain issues that could generate support on both sides of the aisle or perhaps leaving Democrats with the blame if the effort falls apart. White House aides sounded a note of pessimism that a sweeping legislativ­e deal on immigratio­n or infrastruc­ture could be struck but thought there could be bipartisan energy on issues like criminal justice reform and opioids.

The White House also believes that much of what it wants to do can move forward in 2019 despite the Democrats’ capture of the House because Republican­s still control the Senate.

White House aides are expecting a number of highprofil­e departures from the administra­tion, including from the Cabinet, and replacemen­ts should have an easier time with confirmati­on with the Senate still in GOP hands. Moreover, keeping Republican­s in charge of the Senate will allow Trump to continue with his flood of federal judicial appointmen­ts and allow him to make progress on trade deals, which will be a centerpiec­e of 2019.

West Wing aides are bracing for a number of investigat­ions, including probes into whether Trump’s business was profiting off his presidency and looking at his administra­tion’s move to separate migrant children from their families.

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The world was watching the U.S. midterm elections Tuesday. In Tokyo on Wednesday, people walked past a huge public TV screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump during a news program covering the pivotal event.
EUGENE HOSHIKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The world was watching the U.S. midterm elections Tuesday. In Tokyo on Wednesday, people walked past a huge public TV screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump during a news program covering the pivotal event.

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