Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

President, McConnell reaffirm alliance

Senate leader says he, Trump share goals and speak often

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WASHINGTON » Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell reaffirmed their alliance of necessity Monday in a raucous Rose Garden news conference that also underscore­d their sharp difference­s.

The garrulous president claimed they were longtime friends now closer than ever; the reserved Senate Republican leader allowed that they share goals and speak often.

It was a spectacle that mesmerized Washington, as Trump and McConnell appeared side by side for more than a half hour, the president tossing off answers — sometimes mini-speeches — on all topics while McConnell, discipline­d as always, delivered brief, scholarly explanatio­ns about the legislativ­e process and the risks to their party of nominating candidates who can’t win.

At various points, the president denounced the investigat­ion of possible Russian ties to his 2016 campaign, lauded himself for his record on judicial nomination­s, argued wrongly that “it took years for the Reagan administra­tion to get taxes

done,” and claimed past presidents hadn’t necessaril­y contacted bereaved family members to mourn lost service members — before backtracki­ng on that assertion when pressed. He also noted, as he often does, that he won the presidenti­al election last fall, and he implored Hillary Clinton to run again.

In front of a hastily assembled White House press corps, jostling each other on the lawn because there wasn’t time to bring out chairs, Trump began his remarks by saluting McConnell and, as he described it, their longstandi­ng friendship.

“We’re probably now closer than ever before,” the president proclaimed as McConnell grinned stiffly at his side. “My relationsh­ip with this gentleman is outstandin­g.”

Trump spent August assailing McConnell for his inability to pass legislatio­n to repeal the Affordable Care Act, calling the failure “a disgrace” and ordering McConnell over Twitter to “get back to work.” For his part, McConnell has complained that Trump had “excessive expectatio­ns” for how quickly Congress could act.

Neverthele­ss, the Kentucky senator seconded the president’s latest views.

“Contrary to what some of you may have reported, we are together, totally, on this agenda to move America forward,” McConnell said.

Trump defended his former top adviser, Steve Bannon, who now is threatenin­g all-out political war on McConnell and establishm­ent Republican­s, including incumbent senators. But the president also suggested he might try to talk Bannon out of some of his threats against Senate Republican­s whom McConnell has pledged to defend.

“Some of the people

that he may be looking at, I’m going to see if we talk him out of that, because frankly, they’re great people,” Trump said.

That represente­d a notable shift from just a couple hours earlier, when Trump praised Bannon at a Cabinet meeting without suggesting he might step in to protect incumbent Republican­s like John Barrasso of Wyoming or Deb Fischer of Nebraska, both of whom Bannon named in a threatenin­g speech over the weekend. Trump’s change in tone suggested McConnell, whose allies regularly do battle with Bannon, might have talked Trump into intervenin­g.

“Just so you understand, the Republican Party is very, very unified,” Trump insisted.

McConnell took the opportunit­y to lay out, for the public and for the audience of one standing beside him, why he and GOP allies work protect Senate incumbents. He listed some conservati­ve Republican­s nominated in the 2010 and 2012 cycles, before observing, “They’re not in the Senate. And the reason for that was that they were not able to appeal to a broader electorate in the general election.”

Trump briefly pursed his lips as McConnell made those remarks, then took a question on another topic.

It was not clear what led to Monday’s sudden question-and-answer session, which followed lunch between McConnell and Trump at the White House. Their meeting came at a critical time, with the Senate poised to vote this week on a budget that would set the stage for tax legislatio­n that many Republican­s view as make-or-break following the failure on health care. Both McConnell and Trump recommitte­d themselves to the goal of passing a tax bill by the end of this year.

The last time McConnell was at the White House was early last month. On that occasion, Trump bypassed him and Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan to cut a deal with the Senate’s Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer, and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi on debt and spending.

That kicked off a brief period when bipartisan­ship was in the air in Washington, and it seemed possible that Trump would make common cause with Democrats at the expense of Republican­s on other issues, too. But the suggestion of a deal on immigratio­n appears to have fallen apart. Questioned Monday about Schumer and Pelosi, Trump replied: “Well, I hope to have a relationsh­ip. If we don’t, we don’t.”

However, he claimed that his recent action to shut off certain payments to insurers under the Affordable Care Act, denounced by Democrats as sabotage, was forcing bipartisan talks. Indeed, there may be a renewed focus on Senate bipartisan negotiatio­ns aimed at addressing the payments, which go to subsidize costs for low-income people.

“Because of that, people are talking now, Democrats are talking to the Republican­s,” Trump said, contending that a shortterm fix would be followed next year by ultimate success in repealing Obamacare, and asserting with no evidence, as he’s done in the past, that the votes are there now to repeal the law.

Trump also denounced the investigat­ion into his campaign’s involvemen­t with Russia, being conducted by a special counsel and GOP-led congressio­nal committees.

“The whole Russia thing was an excuse for the Democrats losing the election,” he said.

“There has been absolutely no collusion. It’s been stated that they have no collusion. They ought to get to the end of it, because I think the American public is sick of it.”

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