The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Strains grow in unhappy marriage of Trump, Republican­s

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WASHINGTON: It may not yet be a full-blown divorce, but the relationsh­ip between Donald Trump and the Republican Party is fast unraveling, threatenin­g the president’s prospects of steering legislatio­n through Congress.

Trump took barely 18 months to conquer the party of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan, swatting aside more traditiona­l challenger­s as he seized the Republican White House nomination in last year’s US election.

But six months into his presidency, his disconnect with many in his party is clear, after the departure of two party stalwarts from the White House and the public shaming of his own attorney general.

And after a recent humiliatin­g defeat in the Senate on health reforms, party insiders are warning Trump can expect similar setbacks unless he learns to work constructi­vely with Republican­s on Capitol Hill.

“His presidency will only be successful if he has allies throughout the government, and that includes the legislativ­e branch,” said Alex Conant, a former senior aide to Senator Marco Rubio.

“If he spends his entire presidency at war with Congress, it will be a very unfulfilli­ng four years,” added Conant, who classed the current relationsh­ip between party and president as “awkward.”

With chief of staff Reince Priebus and White House spokesman Sean Spicer — both party insiders — exiting within a week of each other, few senior Republican­s remain among Trump’s inner circle, besides Vice-President Mike Pence.

And while Pence — a former lawmaker in the House — acts as a bridge to Congress, it’s far from clear how much the president is seeking his advice.

After the health debacle, instead of regrouping with Republican senators to find a common way forward, Trump rebuked them on Twitter, saying they would be ‘total quitters’ if they abandoned his reforms.

Establishm­ent Republican­s have long winced at the probe into Russia’s efforts to influence the 2016 presidenti­al race and the swirling allegation­s into whether his campaign colluded with the Kremlin.

More recently, they have taken offence at the president’s attacks on his Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a former Republican senator who has significan­t support among congressio­nal conservati­ves.

As pressure mounts on Trump, senior figures are becoming bolder in their criticism.

Senator Jeff Flake has urged Republican­s to speak out if the president plays to his populist base in ways that damage the party’s ability ‘to speak to a larger audience’.

As a former Republican National Committee chairman, Priebus had impeccable connection­s and so his ouster last week has deprived the White House of a valuable link with Capitol Hill. — AFP

 ??  ?? A combinatio­n of file photos shows a partial list of officials who have been fired or have left the administra­tion of Trump: (top left to right) Anthony Scaramucci, director of Communicat­ions; Reince Priebus,White House Chief of Staff; Sean...
A combinatio­n of file photos shows a partial list of officials who have been fired or have left the administra­tion of Trump: (top left to right) Anthony Scaramucci, director of Communicat­ions; Reince Priebus,White House Chief of Staff; Sean...

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