The New Zealand Herald

Trump battling to right ship in wake of health defeat

Nicola Lamb writes that after Donald Trump’s healthcare defeat, his opponents in and outside his party scent blood

- Nicola Lamb is the NZ Herald’s Foreign Editor

It was bad enough that the White House and Republican­s in Congress made a mess of their first big legislativ­e test. What gives the capitulati­on on healthcare an outsized impact is that it loudly exposes what we’ve gradually suspected watching the Trump Administra­tion battle its way through weeks of strife.

Donald Trump keeps crashing in the credibilit­y gap between what he has promised and brags about, and what follows. It’s the Art of the Oversell followed by the Don’t Worry about the Detail reality. Essentiall­y, the self-described dealmaker couldn’t make the deal on healthcare.

Boston Globe columnist Michael Cohen tweeted: “The reason this is so bad for Trump is it punctures his image as a guy who would go to Washington & get things done.” A Politico report was brutal: “The businessma­n president, who sold himself to tens of millions of disillusio­ned voters last year as the only outsider who could tame a broken capital, ended his first confrontat­ion with lawmakers overmatche­d, out-maneuvered and ultimately empty-handed”.

In the New York Times Nicholas Kristof wrote: “Trump is a world-class boaster. He promised a healthcare plan that would be ‘unbelievab­le,’ ‘beautiful,’ ‘terrific,’ ‘less expensive and much better,’ ‘insurance for everybody’. But he’s abysmal at delivering — because the basic truth is that he’s an effective politician who’s utterly incompeten­t at governing.” Atlantic writer James Fallows wondered: “Is there ANY prev example of a new admin, w control of both houses, losing on first big, trademark legis fight”.

Why does this feel like a dambusting, reputation-crumbling moment? Because — just 64 days into Trump’s presidency — it sits on top of a pile of failures, mis-steps and scandals. The stalled immigratio­n bans, the Russia investigat­ions, the false wiretap claim, the National Security Adviser’s resignatio­n, the Attorney-General having to recuse himself, the cost of the wall, the blatant false statements, the mixed messages from senior officials, the staffing slowness with only 20 nominees confirmed so far.

Kristof added: “One of President Trump’s rare strengths has been his ability to project competence… The Trump Administra­tion is increasing­ly showing itself to be breathtaki­ngly incompeten­t.” New York Times columnist Frank Bruni climbed in: “Washington under [Trump] doesn’t resemble the same old swamp. It looks like a sandbox. There’s commotion aplenty, noise galore and not much evidence of adult supervisio­n”.

Conservati­ve writer Ross Douthat, also of the New York Times, lays some of the blame on Trump’s advisers. “Trump’s presidency is flailing for many reasons, but lack of close advisers who’ve thought about translatin­g populism into policy is key,” he tweeted. “Trump made a lot of big, heterodox promises on the campaign trail. Now clear nobody in his circle of trust thought about how those cash out.”

Crises brief and ongoing have become the overall narrative of this Administra­tion. With Trump having about 37 per cent job approval on Gallup, it will be hard for him to dig out of this hole. Usually presidents in the honeymoon period use their popularity to get projects through. Trump has limited presidenti­al ‘capital’ to spend. The bad news for Trump is that the story of the healthcare failure clarifies that he lacks the clout and ability to get the job done and have his wishes obeyed.

In the end, Trump was unable to muster enough support for the American Health Act to replace Obamacare — failing in one of his key campaign promises. For the Republican Party, seven years of promises to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act were ditched after 17 days. Speaker Paul Ryan said the US will be “living with Obamacare for the foreseeabl­e future”.

The past three occupants of the White House all got big-ticket items through in their first 100 days. President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package had passed both houses by mid-February. There were seven bills passed during President George W. Bush’s first 100 days, including a US$1.6 trillion tax cut; 11 in Obama’s and 24 in Bill Clinton’s, including a US$1.5 trillion budget outline. Obama, Bush and Clinton all rated over 50 per cent in job approval after 100 days.

Trumpcare would have thrown millions of Americans off health insurance and given a tax cut to the wealthiest Americans. A Quinnipiac poll showed only 17 per cent of Americans supported the bill, with 56 per cent opposed. Its unpopulari­ty was obvious in videos of strained Republican congressme­n holding town hall events with rowdy constituen­ts.

There was a Democraten­couraged grassroots push for people to phone in their views to congressio­nal representa­tives. Washington Post reporter Philip Bump tweeted: “My tally of calls reported by (mostly Dem) House members on the GOP bill: 1130 for 59,337 against.” Trump also got caught up in the fault lines of the Republican Party. There were two rebellious camps among House Republican­s: About two dozen centrists, under pressure from voters to reject the bill; and the right-wing Freedom Caucus, opposed to government involvemen­t in healthcare. Together they numbered about 50 representa­tives — more than twice as many votes as the party could afford to drop. Trump’s negotiatin­g style and reported lack of knowledge of and interest in policy have been savaged. FiveThirty­Eight reports: “None of his negotiatin­g moves worked. In meetings with members of Congress, he bluntly called out those who were not yet behind the bill, an intimidati­ng approach that presidents often avoid. He tried to negotiate the details of the bill with the Freedom Caucus, while also using his Twitter feed to pressure them”. According to NBC’s Benjy Sarlin: “Trump was light on policy knowledge and his ideas only became less clear with time”.

Politico reported that: “For weeks Trump had seemed disinteres­ted and disengaged from the specifics of the healthcare fight, both behind closed doors with his aides and at public rallies. Trump ‘just wanted to get something he could sign,’ said one adviser. ‘He was over it’.”

Budget Director Mick Mulvaney laid down an ultimatum from Trump, telling members that the President wanted a vote and would move on if it failed. But the moderates paid more notice to the people who can vote them out and members of the Freedom Caucus maintained their independen­ce from Trump’s control.

Politico’s Tim Alberta writes: “Through charm, force of personalit­y and sheer intimidati­on, Trump did move some votes into the yes column. He lacked familiarit­y with the legislatio­n itself, and thought it was Ryan’s job to sell the specifics”.

Alberta summarises: “If the bill failed because Trump is a great salesman with a poor grasp of policy, it also failed because Ryan is poor salesman with a great grasp of policy”.

Obama White House veteran David Axelrod implied a contrast between the two presidents. “The ACA passed, against all odds, because of the sustained, personal commitment of a president to the cause, the details and the process.”

Yet there is some political upside for Trump. He no-longer has to handle months more of legislativ­e fighting over an unpopular issue, and as Stephen Bush notes in the New Statesman: “The appearance of weakness and failure is less electorall­y damaging than actually succeeding in removing healthcare from millions of people, including people who voted for Trump.”

Having anger and fear over healthcare with them would have fuelled the Democrats’ campaign next year for the Midterm elections. But resistance over the immigratio­n bans and healthcare will be giving the Democrats confidence they can succeed after the loss last November.

Republican political analyst Steve Schmidt believes: “Trump voters will not blame Democrats or Trump. They will blame the House GOP. This is a political disaster for Congressio­nal GOP”. Analyst Sean Trende of RealClearP­olitics.com tweeted: “Looking more and more like Carter: POTUS tries different direction, but has a hard time getting party to come along. But, it’s early.”

Trump says he will move on to tax reform but that won’t be an easy process. Kevin Brady, the Ways and Means chairman told Alberta: “Tax reform is the hardest lift in a generation. So that would be a big challenge.” Josh Holmes, a former chief of staff to Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, told Politico: “The Republican Party is still operating as an opposition party. If they can’t break the fever…it says an enormous amount about the prospects of tax reform, infrastruc­ture and some sort of immigratio­n proposal”.

Unless Trump gets more help in the White House and Congress to translate his vision into legislatio­n, there’s no reason to be confident those projects will pass.

The factions in his party remain and have seen how he caved on healthcare. The Democrats will be confident in the path of constant resistance. His job approval rating is low. The evidence of incompeten­ce in Trump’s Administra­tion is mounting. And the clock is ticking to the Midterms.

 ?? Pictures / AP ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan.
Pictures / AP House Speaker Paul Ryan.

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