Medicine Hat News

White House looks to bounce back after health care loss

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WASHINGTON Regrouping after a rocky few weeks, the White House declared Monday that President Donald Trump doesn’t consider the health care battle to be over, suggesting he may turn to Democrats to help him overhaul the system after his own party rejected his proposal.

The sudden interest in bipartisan­ship is a shift for a president who has spent months mocking Democratic leaders as inept. And Democrats indicated they have no interest if his intent is still to dismantle “Obamacare.”

But Trump’s interest reflects the strained state of his relations with conservati­ves in his party and his search for a way to regain his footing after the painful withdrawal of his health care legislatio­n last Friday.

“I don’t think we’ve seen the end of health care,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Monday, pointing to “a series of fits and starts” that marked the process that led to passage of President Barack Obama’s health care law, too, in 2010.

Trump’s failure to win the votes to pass his bill has prompted the new president to rethink how he intends to promote his agenda in Congress.

White House officials are signalling a renewed focus on job creation, taxes and the administra­tion’s push to win confirmati­on of Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, a bright spot for the president. House Speaker Paul Ryan huddled at the White House with Vice-President Mike Pence, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and White House chief of staff Reince Priebus to discuss the legislativ­e agenda, a Ryan spokesman said.

Yet the rosy notion of Democratic co-operation glosses over recent history.

Trump is viewed with broad contempt among the party’s base. Before his inaugurati­on, the incoming president called Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer the “head clown” in tweets about the health care law.

Schumer said in light of the withdrawal of the House bill the president should no longer attempt to undermine the Obama law. “He’s in charge, people want him to make their lives better, not make them worse because of some political anger or vendetta,” he said.

In the meantime, lawmakers face the possibilit­y of a partial government shutdown on April 29 unless Republican­s and Democrats can manage to pass a federal spending bill or provide an extension of current funding levels.

Trump had initially blamed Democrats for the health care measure’s failure, predicting an eventual collapse of the law. But he later acknowledg­ed a more widely held view: That the bill was undone by hard-line conservati­ves of the House Freedom Caucus, who refused to back a measure they said did not go far enough in repealing the current law.

Trump on Sunday complained on Twitter that Democrats were gleeful that “the Freedom Caucus, with the help of Club For Growth and Heritage, have saved Planned Parenthood & Ocare!”

Spicer on Monday reiterated that Trump had learned “a lot in this process about loyalty” but brushed off questions of whether the president had written off working with conservati­ves. He also dismissed suggestion­s that Trump encouraged his 27 million Twitter followers to watch Judge Jeanine Pirro’s program on Fox News on Saturday as a slap against Ryan. Pirro opened her show with a call for Ryan to resign.

Republican­s warned that a blame game would be counterpro­ductive.

“It would be a huge mistake for the message on this failure on health care to be to assume that conservati­ves won’t be good allies,” said Matt Schlapp, the chairman of the American Conservati­ve Union. “Most conservati­ves stood with the president.”

Publicly, Trump on Monday greeted female business owners to a roundtable discussion on jobs and later joined with Republican lawmakers and members of his Cabinet as he signed into law bills focused on overturnin­g Obama era regulation­s.

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Paul Ryan

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