Boston Herald

Prez avoiding blame for any GOP losses

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg’s new book, “The Suicide of the West,” will be released April 24.

President Trump signed the $1.3 trillion omnibus spending deal on Friday, averting another government shutdown. Written largely in secret and passed without any time to read its 2,232 pages, the bill violated pretty much everything the GOP had promised about reforming the process of legislatin­g.

For conservati­ves, with the exception of a large increase in defense spending, the bill is a hot mess. It raises discretion­ary spending 13 percent, advances almost no GOP domestic priorities while fulfilling many Democratic ones. There’s a pittance for border security and some new fencing, but nothing for the president’s “big, beautiful wall.”

It was reportedly this fact that prompted Trump to tweet a veto threat on Friday morning, sending White House and Hill staffers scrambling.

Then, in a shambolic press conference cum signing ceremony later that day, he grudgingly said he’d sign what he called “crazy” legislatio­n. But, he added, he would “never” sign another bill like this again. The key message of the day: It’s not my fault!

So whose fault was it? Those backstabbi­ng blackguard­s of the Beltway.

“Total betrayal by the Senate and House leadership,” said Fox News host Jeanine Pirro, one of Trump’s most reliable unofficial spokeswome­n. “The president and the people who voted for him have been betrayed by Speaker Paul Ryan and Leader Mitch McConnell. And the people in Kentucky and Wisconsin need to make sure that these guys are defeated in the next election so this president can carry on the agenda that we elected him to do.”

It’s interestin­g when people who insist that Trump is the greatest negotiator in history also insist that he got rolled.

But that is the new party line, apparently, and it must be toed. “The president was really sold a bill of goods here,” Trump confidant Chris Ruddy told The Washington Post. There’s just one problem: It’s a lie. Or, to be more charitable, it’s untrue, even if those saying it believe it.

A source who was involved in drafting the bill tells me the White House was in the loop on the negotiatio­ns. Trump’s legislativ­e affairs director, Marc Short, signed off on the deal — and seemed to be as surprised as anyone by the veto threat. The president was briefed on the major pieces all along.

Why the lie? Undoubtedl­y for some people, it’s too hard to process the idea that the president deserves blame or is out of his depth. Many of the same people decrying all the wasteful spending in the bill haven’t noted that Trump’s stated reason for threatenin­g a veto was that it didn’t spend more on a wall or include a fix for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

But cognitive dissonance is only part of the story. This stabbed-inthe-back narrative is not merely a cynical excuse for letting Trump off the hook. It also lays essential groundwork for Trump to escape blame if the GOP loses the House in the 2018 midterms.

Amy Kremer, co-founder of the super PAC Women Vote Trump, and countless others have insisted that betrayal — not Trump — is why the GOP will lose in November. “Democrats just won November #midterms,” Kremer tweeted when the bill was passed. “No point in wasting my time between now and then.”

Conservati­ve discontent over the omnibus spending bill will surely make things harder for the GOP, and for the president. But the most important priority has been saved: the ability to say Trump is not to blame.

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