Austin American-Statesman

After stumbles, Republican­s in Congress make their mark

GOP leaders tout string of conservati­ve achievemen­ts in 2017.

- Sheryl Gay Stolberg ©2017 The New York Times

After a halting start, the Republican-controlled 115th Congress sometimes in collaborat­ion with President Donald Trump, often despite him has enacted surprising­ly far-reaching conservati­ve achievemen­ts in its first year, among them a long-promised rewrite of the tax code, oil drilling in the Arctic and a series of lifetime appointmen­ts to the judiciary.

For the new year, Republican leaders in the House have their sights on decades-old programs for the poor that they say are too easily exploited by those who do not need them. Trump is expected to move forward with a long-promised program to rebuild roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture.

And Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader, is speaking gamely of bipartisan­ship, especially on legislatio­n to protect young unauthoriz­ed immigrants brought to the country as children, whose Obama-era protection from deportatio­n will run out in March.

On Jan. 20 the latest stopgap spending measure expires, giving lawmakers from both parties another chance to force resolution­s on outstandin­g immigratio­n and health care measures, along with efforts to raise caps on military and domestic spending. And an $81 billion package of relief for hurricane and wildfire victims that passed the House last week awaits Senate action.

“I don’t think most of our Democratic colleagues want to do nothing, and there are areas, I think, where we can get bipartisan agreement,” McConnell told reporters Friday.

But all of those plans will play out in an election year that is shaping up as a referendum on Trump, whose

historical­ly low approval ratings could deflate any Republican overtures to Democrats not eager to boost the president.

“Hope springs eternal, but they’d have to be a real reversal from the way they’ve operated now,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader.

McConnell declared 2017 a year of “extraordin­ary accom- plishment,” a boast that only weeks ago seemed impossible. But a year marred by public spats between the president and Republican leaders in Congress was capped off with a rewrite of the tax code that cut corporate tax rates, favored business owners and reduced income tax rates, at least temporaril­y, for most families. The same law opened Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil exploratio­n, a goal sought by Republican­s for decades.

It also eliminated tax penal- ties in the Affordable Care Act intended to force most Ameri- cans to have health care. Ending the individual mandate was Republican­s’ most direct blow to President Barack Obama’s signature domestic achievemen­t after a year of misses and ineffectua­l attacks.

At least for now, the tax bill remains highly unpopular, according to opinion polls. Neverthele­ss, Trump trumpeted those achievemen­ts on Twitter on Sunday. “What an incredible year we had,” he added. “Don’t let the Fake News con- vince you otherwise.”

Those achievemen­ts came after the quiet confirmati­on of 12 federal appeals court judges — the most in a single year since the appeals courts were establishe­d in 1891. The confirmati­ons will remake the federal judiciary, stocking it with young and very conserva- tive judges who will serve for decades to come. And those came along with the confirmati­on of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

“With the new administra- tion coming in, it has been more chaotic and more polit- icized than I would like to think,” Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said. “But we do have more accomplish­ments

than I think we’re generally given credit for.”

For Republican­s, who never expected Trump to win the presidency, getting adjusted to life with a former reality TV star in the White House was not easy.

“I’d say one of the big- ger challenges we dealt with this year is just trying to manage the chaotic nature of the White House, the never-end- ing tweets, drama and dys- function,” said Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa.

But after a photo finish, Democrats are not calling the 115th Congress “do-nothing.” Instead they are dwelling on what Republican­s did.

“If you ask the top 1 percent how Senate Republican­s did this year, they’d give them an A,” Schumer said. “But if you ask middle-class Americans how the Republican Sen-

ate did this year, they’d give them a big fat red F.”

McConnell has warned that 2018 will be difficult. With the election in Alabama of Doug Jones, a Democrat, to the Sen- ate, the Republican major- ity next year will be 51-49.

Senate Republican­s are eyeing modest measures in the coming months: to protect “Dreamers,” young unautho- rized immigrants; to revise the

Obama-era Dodd-Frank financial regulatory law to protect small community banks; and to stabilize health insurance markets by temporaril­y rein- stating insurance subsidies suspended by Trump.

Trump will host McConnell and Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin at Camp David in the first weekend of Janu- ary to align on an agenda for 2018, beginning with infrastruc­ture, his legislativ­e director, Marc Short, said on Fox News Sunday.

“Both Democrats and Repub- licans say that infrastruc­ture is crumbling and we need to fix it,” he said. “But the big ques- tion remains: Will Democrats put politics aside and actually work with us? They need to meet us halfway.”

Ryan has bigger ambitions of taking on some of the government’s biggest programs; Republican­s have singled out food stamps, welfare and Medicaid. But after a bruising year, Democrats are leery. Repub- licans and Democrats had

detailed plans to lure corpo- rate profits parked overseas back home, and use some of that revenue to finance an infrastruc­ture push. The new tax law ignored those proposals.

“They used it all to reduce taxes on the wealthiest corpo- rations,” Schumer said.

As for House plans to cut poverty programs, Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat, scoffed: “It is just

perfect, isn’t it? Tax breaks for the wealthiest people who haven’t punched a time clock in their lives so that we could cut back food stamps for single moms trying to feed hungry kids. Perfect.”

The truth is, even McConnell acknowledg­ed that 2017 was “pretty partisan.”

The choice to make repealing the Affordable Care Act conservati­ves’ first legislativ­e effort was generally considered a misstep, said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. And

the half measure that Republican­s achieved may destabiliz­e insurance markets.

“The good news is we repealed the individual mandate,” Graham said. “The bad news is we now own health care, for sure.”

By the numbers, Congress was less productive in 2017 than in 2009, the first year of Obama’s presidency. In 2009, Obama signed 125 bills into law, including a huge economic stimulus package, the expansion of the Children’s Health Insurance Program and legislatio­n to regulate tobacco.

This year, Trump signed 93 measures into law, but of those, 15 were “joint resolution­s of disapprova­l” which rolled back pending Obamaera regulation­s. Under the law that created such resolution­s, they are not technicall­y laws

and cannot be filibuster­ed in the Senate.

“Other than the tax bill, this first session of Congress has been a bit of a bust,” said Steven S. Smith, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis. “And that probably means that this Congress is a bust, because first sessions tend to be a little bit more productive than second sessions.”

Beyond the tax bill, much of what Congress accomplish­ed came despite Trump, not because of him. Lawmakers from both parties forced the president to accept sweeping sanctions against Russia, Iran and North Korea and limited his ability to suspend or lift them. The legislatio­n passed with veto-proof majorities.

The string of regulatory rollbacks, passed using a once little-known law called the Congressio­nal Review Act, did reverse pending rules approved in the last days of the Obama administra­tion, including one aimed at protecting internet privacy, one aimed at preventing coal companies from dumping waste into streams,

and another intended to bar people with mental illnesses from buying guns.

“This administra­tion and Congress working together probably did more on the

deregulato­ry front than any Congress in modern history,” declared Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla.

But Durbin said that was hardly something to boast

about. “If you’d look at what little we have done this year in the United States Senate compared to when I arrived in this chamber, you’d wonder how we could draw a paycheck,” said Durbin, who has spent 20 years in the Senate.

Congress did complete some little-noticed business in bipartisan fashion. By a vote of 94-1, the Senate passed legislatio­n to finance the Food and Drug Administra­tion, which reauthoriz­ed user fees to pay for the review of medical devices and drugs.

Some Republican­s expressed confidence that even Trump has learned some lessons from such experience­s.

“The president has developed a much greater appreciati­on for the process than he had a year ago,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. “I personally developed a greater sense of appreciati­on for the new fresh set of eyes that he brings to this. And if we could put those two things together effectivel­y, next year we will have a pretty good starting point.”

 ?? AL DRAGO /NEW YORK TIMES ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., here at the White House last week, declared 2017 a year of “extraordin­ary accomplish­ment,” a boast that only weeks ago seemed impossible.
AL DRAGO /NEW YORK TIMES Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., here at the White House last week, declared 2017 a year of “extraordin­ary accomplish­ment,” a boast that only weeks ago seemed impossible.

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