Chattanooga Times Free Press

BEHIND TRUMP’S NEW EXECUTIVE ACTIONS

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President Trump’s most recent high-profile executive actions — on Obamacare, immigratio­n and the Iran nuclear deal — do three big things.

First, they push Congress to act, which involves more than just calling the bluff of Republican leaders who talked big during the Obama years but failed to produce once the GOP controlled both Congress and White House. The president is using executive authority to pressure lawmakers to exercise appropriat­e legislativ­e authority.

Second, Trump has reinforced what many of his supporters find most appealing about him — that he can act as a leader not clearly aligned with either party.

And third, Trump’s actions galvanize support among some of Washington’s most conservati­ve lawmakers and thinkers, even some who have been highly critical of him in the past.

On the first point, Trump is pressing Congress to act in areas in which Republican­s accused Barack of Obama of executive overreach.

On Obamacare, Trump cut off the flow of cost-sharing reduction payments to insurance companies. The expenditur­es were never appropriat­ed by Congress; the Obama administra­tion carried them out to keep Obamacare afloat, regardless of the law. Now Trump has set the stage for a constituti­onal fix. On DACA, Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, Trump has challenged Congress to come up with a legitimate fix to an Obama executive action that all Republican­s saw as overreach. And on the Iran deal, Trump’s action opens the door for action in Congress, where Republican­s said the issue always belonged, after Obama bypassed lawmakers.

On the second point, Trump’s actions highlight the fact that a lot of his supporters still see him not as an insider but as an outside force pushing an entrenched, sclerotic Republican Party to act.

That was candidate Trump’s pitch to voters. “Trump is about the closest thing to a third-party candidate without having to leave the party,” Chuck Laudner, who ran Trump’s Iowa campaign, told me in May 2015, when crowds were starting to take Trump seriously.

Not much has changed since then. “To a huge chunk of the electorate, Trump is not a Republican,” a veteran GOP operative told me recently.

Finally, on the third point, Trump is getting high marks from some conservati­ve Republican­s and thinkers. When I asked one deeply conservati­ve lawmaker, who in turn polled what other members had told him, he said they are glad to see the president putting Republican­s to the test: Will they just talk like conservati­ves, or will they actually legislate like conservati­ves?

Some conservati­ve writers who have long criticized Obama’s unilateral actions were happy to see Trump begin to undo them. On Obamacare, National Review — which published an “Against Trump” issue in the primaries and has had a bumpy relationsh­ip with the president since — reacted with an editorial headlined “Trump’s Sensible Health-Care Actions.”

On DACA, a lot of conservati­ves slammed Trump when there were reports he had reached a “deal” with Democrats Charles Schumer and Nancy Pelosi. But now that Trump has attached a wish-list of tough border and interior enforcemen­t priorities to any DACA legalizati­on, many see it as a chance for Congress to take actual action on immigratio­n.

On the nuclear deal, the Weekly Standard, which has at times been a center of NeverTrump­ism, published a reaction with the headline, “He’s right about Iran.”

Trump’s actions might not work. After all, he is pressuring Congress to act, but that doesn’t mean Congress will act, especially when the president is feuding with some key members. But Trump’s moves are a step in the direction of fixing some of the worst excesses of the Obama administra­tion — if Republican­s will take the opportunit­y.

Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for The Washington Examiner. Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n for UFS

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Byron York

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