Waterloo Region Record

Feud in the GOP family: Trump takes out anger on his party

- Alexander Panetta

WASHINGTON — The president of the United States is tweeting more often, more angrily and more frequently against members of his own political family, in a political spectacle revealing fault lines within America’s governing party.

Donald Trump began the day with trash-talking tweets against the Republican leader of the Senate, Mitch McConnell.

“Get back to work,” Trump said in one, urging the senator to end his holiday and start passing bills on health reform, tax cuts and infrastruc­ture.

He lamented in another socialmedi­a screed that McConnell spent seven years promising to repeal Barack Obama’s health law — and that when the moment finally came, “he couldn’t get it done.” Then came a warning shot. Trump inched close to demanding the resignatio­n of his party’s senior lawmaker — who happens to be married to Trump’s transporta­tion secretary.

When a reporter asked whether McConnell should step down, the president replied, “If he doesn’t get (those bills) done, then you can ask me that question.”

Tensions between the president and his party are not new.

Few senior Republican­s supported his campaign. Some even urged him to resign a few weeks before the election, over an old tape scandal.

Those difference­s were papered over in the first few months of Trump’s presidency, but are being exposed again.

By firing chief of staff Reince Priebus and forcing out spokesman Sean Spicer, Trump’s White House cut off rare links to the party establishm­ent.

That’s been followed with the commander-in-chief publicly slapping around members of his political family.

For a few days, his ire was directed at Attorney General Jeff Sessions and his hands-off approach to the Russia probe. Now Trump’s allies are seeking to squeeze Trump-skeptical Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake out in a primary next year.

Trump is getting angrier in social media and he’s using it more.

In the first four full months of his presidency, he used Twitter to tweet or retweet messages 150 times or less, in a relatively stable pattern; it then ramped up to 208 messages in June, 242 in July, and he’s on track to hit 260 this month if he keeps up this current pace of 8.4 per day.

In addition, the newer messages are increasing­ly angry, according to an analysis of word-sentiments run through the R computer-programmin­g language. The sentiment analysis shows that messages with predominan­tly positive words easily outnumbere­d negative ones as recently as May, but it’s changed: negative messages have been running neckand-neck or even surpassing positive ones in recent weeks.

Now he’s topped it off by publicly belittling his party’s leadership online.

One Obama-era official expressed incredulit­y at the president’s choice of target. McConnell not only controls the fate of Trump’s legislativ­e agenda, but also potentiall­y Trump’s entire political destiny, said former Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

“Fast forward months/years,” Miller tweeted.

“If (special counsel Robert) Mueller ever makes an impeachmen­t referral, probably no one more important to Trump’s fate than McConnell.”

On Capitol Hill, a number of Republican­s have been grumbling about life under President Trump. McConnell himself may have triggered the president’s angry response with a speech in his home state, where he said Trump was new to politics and might have had unrealisti­c hopes of what he might achieve.

“Our new president, of course, has not been in this line of work before,” McConnell told a Kentucky gathering.

“I think (he) had excessive expectatio­ns about how quickly things happen in the democratic process.”

But some Republican­s interjecte­d to say the president may have a point. A member of the House of Representa­tives said he was right to be annoyed at the Senate, where a bill to repeal Obamacare failed by one vote.

“I really do believe this was a congressio­nal failure. This was not a presidenti­al failure. And Republican­s of all stripes need to look in the mirror and recognize that,” lawmaker Tom Cole told CNN.

“We made this commitment for seven years.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell at a news conference on Capitol Hill.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell at a news conference on Capitol Hill.

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