Houston Chronicle Sunday

Uncertain Congress limps to a close

Ryan hopeful government can unify, get nation ‘back on track’

- By Erica Werner

WASHINGTON — The 114th Congress has limped to a close, two years of partisan acrimony punctuated by the occasional burst of bipartisan deal-making in the waning days of Barack Obama’s presidency.

Ahead is uncertaint­y, as the GOP prepares to assume monopoly control over Washington for the first time in a decade come January, with Congress’ relationsh­ip with an untested new president yet to be determined.

Thus far, congressio­nal Republican­s have been highly deferentia­l to President-elect Donald Trump, even when his pronouncem­ents fly in the face of long-held GOP goals like free trade and limited government. The question hanging over the next Congress will be whether Trump prevails on issues like his call for a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill and steep tariffs to prevent outsourcin­g — or whether congressio­nal Republican­s steer him in a direction more in line with traditiona­l GOP beliefs.

“We see the fact that we were given this opportunit­y to have unified government as a way to get this country back on track,” House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said in his final news conference before the House adjourned for the year. “And that includes getting our nation’s finances back on track.”

When lawmakers return to Washington on Jan. 3 and the 115th Congress gets underway, the Senate will immediatel­y begin taking the steps necessary to pass a repeal of Obama’s health care law. Republican­s hope to present Trump with legislatio­n to sign not long after his inaugurati­on Jan. 20.

Yet six years after Obama’s health care overhaul became law, Republican­s still do not know what they’ll replace it with and disagree over how much time they should allow themselves to put a replacemen­t into place.

Before leaving Washington for the final time this year, Republican­s boasted of their achievemen­ts over the past two years. Ryan reeled off a list including a new bipartisan bill to spend billions financing medical research; ending the ban on exporting crude oil; new sanctions on Iran and North Korea; and a long-term highway bill. He also cited a bipartisan education rewrite; a longsought overhaul of Medicare’s payment systems to doctors; a rescue package for Puerto Rico; money to attack the Zika virus; new food labeling requiremen­ts; and more.

“Bipartisan­ship is not rare,” Ryan insisted, “it is just rarely noted.”

Adjournmen­t in the early morning Saturday came only after one last partisan squabble, this one over health benefits for retired coal miners. With a group of miners watching from the gallery and a government shutdown threatenin­g at midnight, the Senate finally voted to pass a short-term government funding bill that will keep the lights on in federal agencies and department­s through April.

By that time, the nation will have seen the new president and GOP Congress tried and tested. And 2018 midterms will already be looming, with potential to bring change to Washington again.

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