Austin American-Statesman

It’s a ‘great thing’ to deal with Dems, Trump now says

- By Erica Werner and Ken Thomas

Frustrated WASHINGTON — with his own party’s leaders in Congress, President Donald Trump talked up his suddenly cozier relationsh­ip with Democrats on Thursday, raising the prospect of new deals on government spending and even posting one of his tweets at their behest.

“I think that’s a great thing for our country,” Trump said, describing his new and “different relationsh­ip” with Democrats.

In public, Republican leaders glossed over the striking turn of events, but lawmakers in both parties were privately puzzling over how Trump’s approach might affect the fate of the party’s agenda. And some conservati­ves openly criticized the deal-making, ideologica­lly flexible president who defied GOP leaders in striking an agreement Wednesday to keep the government operating and raise the nation’s debt limit for just three months.

Democrats, privately leery about how long this new Trump might last, were upbeat in public.

As for Trump, after a series of legislativ­e failures, he has fumed to associates for months about Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan. On Thursday, he predicted a “much stronger coming together” of the two parties and pronounced himself ready to work with Democrats.

“I think that’s what the people of the United States want to see: They want to see some dialogue, they want to see coming together to an extent at least,” he told reporters.

Trump, a longtime Democrat who lived most of his life in deep blue New York City, has never closely adhered to Republican orthodoxy and has routinely shown a willingnes­s to shift positions to seal deals. But his embrace of Democrats in recent days has been startling.

He overruled Republican leaders and his own treasury secretary on a debt ceiling agreement. He courted a Democratic senator with a flight to her home state on Air Force One. He offered reassuranc­es Thursday to young immigrants at the request of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, tweeting that those covered by the federal program he has promised to end “have nothing to worry about” over the next six months.

Trump also signaled a willingnes­s to permanentl­y do away with debt ceiling votes and move ahead on a standalone measure on the young immigrants, two suggestion­s opposed by most Republican­s.

Trump’s unhappines­s with GOP leaders has been building for months.

He has harshly criticized both McConnell and Ryan for failing to pass legislatio­n to repeal the Obama health care law and for not doing more to shield him from the ongoing Russia investigat­ions.

Then, wasting no time after Congress returned from summer break this week, Trump waved off Republican­s who lobbied during a Wednesday Oval Office meeting for an 18-month debt ceiling extension, then 12 months and then six. When Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin continued to press an economic argument in favor of a longer-term deal, Trump cut him off midsentenc­e.

Instead, Trump sided with Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer and Pelosi — “Chuck and Nancy,” as he referred to them later. That deal was underscore­d by a photo taken through the window of the Oval Office showing an animated Schumer pointing his finger in Trump’s face as the president smiled with his hands on Schumer’s arms.

Trump’s budget director, Mick Mulvaney, asked if the president was annoyed with the GOP leadership, said, “He probably is.”

“And believe me, as a Republican, so am I. As a citizen, I am too. I was promised that they would have repealed and replaced Obamacare by now,” Mulvaney told Fox Business Network.

House Speaker Ryan played down the tensions, saying the deal that Trump cut with Democrats on spending, the debt and Hurricane Harvey made sense as the nation deals with two major storms.

Ryan said the president didn’t want to have “some partisan fight in the middle of the response.”

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