Houston Chronicle

Fox host blasts Ryan as Trump says to tune in

- By Maggie Haberman NEW YORK TIMES

Jeanine Pirro, a Fox News host, is a longtime friend of President Donald Trump. So when Trump said on Twitter on Saturday — a day after his crushing defeat in the House on health care — that people should watch her show that night, political observers began guessing what was in store.

What she delivered was a diatribe against the House speaker, Paul Ryan.

“Paul Ryan needs to step down as speaker of the House,” Pirro, a former prosecutor, said at the opening of her show. “The reason? He failed to deliver the votes on his health care bill.”

In Pirro’s telling, Ryan let Trump down by not doing his share of the work in corralling Republican votes to fulfill a seven-year promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act — a view held by a number of the president’s advisers.

“Speaker Ryan, you come in with all your swagger and experience and you sell ’em a bill of goods, which ends up a complete and total failure, and you allow our president in his first 100 days to come out of the box like that, based on what?” Pirro said.

On Fox News on Sunday, Trump’s chief of staff, Reince Priebus, an ally of Ryan’s, said he had not spoken to the president about the Twitter post, but he called the timing “coincident­al.”

Brendan Buck, a spokesman for Ryan, said, “The speaker and president talked for an hour yesterday about moving forward on the agenda, and their relationsh­ip is stronger than ever right now.”

Another spokesman in Ryan’s office said on Sunday: “The two spoke again today, and the president was clear his tweet had nothing to do with the speaker. They are both eager to get back to work on the agenda.”

On Friday, after House Republican­s pulled the health care bill, Trump voiced support for Ryan, saying the speaker had worked “very, very hard.” A person close to the president said that aides did not believe that Trump had spoken with Pirro before his Twitter post, or that he was trying to advertise criticism of Ryan’s leadership.

In their phone call on Saturday, according to a person briefed on the matter, Ryan told Trump that he wanted to proceed with a tax overhaul package. Their relationsh­ip, so far, has seemed to hold.

But privately, Trump has been pressed by some advisers to consider the damage wrought by the bill’s failure and to consider Ryan’s role.

Publicly, at least, Trump was casting blame on Sunday morning not on Ryan but on the small-government conservati­ves in the House Freedom Caucus, as well as outside conservati­ve groups.

 ??  ?? Pirro
Pirro

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States