Boston Herald

Trump open to cutting deals if Democrats are willing

- By MARC A. THIESSEN Marc A. Thiessen is a syndicated columnist.

WASHINGTON — When Donald Trump first took office, many conservati­ves’ greatest fear was that he would be too quick to cut deals with the Democrats. He had previously been a Democrat and had staked out heterodox positions on everything from spending to entitlemen­t reform, the national debt, the minimum wage, trade and health care. During the 2016 campaign, Trump even endorsed universal health care, declaring, “This is an un-Republican thing for me to say … I am going to take care of everybody … (and) the government’s gonna pay for it.” Conservati­ves were aghast. They need not have worried. Democrats showed little interest in negotiatin­g bipartisan bills with President Trump. They preferred to be the “resistance.” And their unrelentin­g opposition pushed Trump to the right. He knew that whatever he was going to get done, he would have to do it with Republican votes. So, he governed as a staunch conservati­ve. But that is not his place of natural equilibriu­m. In his heart, Trump is a dealmaker, not an ideologue. And now, he’s making clear that he wants to cut deals with Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) It was overshadow­ed by his confrontat­ion with CNN’s Jim Acosta, but during his post-election news conference, Trump made clear that he is willing — even eager — to buck House Republican­s and work with Pelosi and the new Democratic majority. On health care, for example, Trump stunned Republican­s when he said he would be willing to support a bipartisan bill that passes with Democratic votes. Similarly, on taxes, Trump announced he was willing to revisit the terms of his signature legislativ­e achievemen­t — his tax-reform law — in exchange for a middle-class tax cut. Asked whether he would be willing to raise rates on corporatio­ns and the wealthy, Trump said, “I would absolutely pursue something even if it means some adjustment.” That’s a huge concession to the Democrats. Indeed, Trump even said it was better that Democrats won control of the House because it frees him to negotiate. “If the Republican­s won — and let’s say we held on by two, or one, or three — it would’ve been very hard,” Trump said, “... because there will always be one, or two, or three people that, for a good reason or for a bad reason, or for grandstand­ing … come over and say, you know, ‘Look, we’re not going to along with this.’ “With Democrats in the majority,” he said, “we have a much easier path, because the Democrats will come to us with a plan for infrastruc­ture, a plan for health care, a plan for whatever they are looking at, and we’ll negotiate.” Translatio­n: Now I can tell the House Freedom Caucus to take a hike and compromise with Democrats instead. The big question: Will House Democrats take him up on it? If they start firing shots at Trump, focusing on investigat­ions and impeachmen­t, he’s going to fire back. But if they accept his outstretch­ed hand, they will find he’s willing to give Democrats a lot of things they want — even over GOP objections. But if Democrats are willing to make concession­s, such as funding the border wall, they will find that Trump is willing to buck conservati­ve orthodoxy and make major concession­s to them. Indeed, if they play their cards right, they can rack up wins on everything from health care and taxes to infrastruc­ture and even immigratio­n. But to do that, Democrats have to decide: Are they now a governing majority? Or are they a resistance? Because they can’t be both.

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