Imperial Valley Press

Trump, an uneven ally for GOP, tests his influence on taxes

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WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Donald Trump announced plans to go to Indiana Wednesday to sell the GOP tax overhaul plan, party leaders cheered his engagement on the highstakes issue. When the White House said one of Trump’s traveling companions would be Indiana’s Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly — a top target in next year’s midterm elections — the hopes turned to head-smacking disbelief.

The episode underscore­s the extent to which Trump has been an uneven — or at best, unpredicta­ble — ally for his party, both on policy and politics.

Time and again, Trump has complained about his party as loudly as he vents about Democrats, or shifted his position as Republican­s leaned on him for support.

The dysfunctio­nal dynamic now stands at the center of Republican­s’ last chance this year to prove they can pass major legislatio­n — a sweeping, multitrill­ion-dollar tax cut that GOP officials believe is crucial to the party maintainin­g its congressio­nal majority in the midterms.

“Literally, if they can’t do this, they can’t do anything,” said Tim Pawlenty, the former Republican governor of Minnesota and head of the Financial Services Roundtable, a bank lobbying group. Trump is a constructi­ve force in the effort, Pawlenty said, “if he can stay focused and stay on message.”

The president this week repeatedly demonstrat­ed his sometimes fickle friendship.

As the party licked its wounds over the failure of its health care legislatio­n, he floated working with Democrats on that issue, something he’s already done on immigratio­n and spending matters.

While he agreed to requests from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to campaign for the establishm­ent-backed candidate in Alabama’s GOP primary, he undercut his impact by pondering aloud whether he’d made a mistake. Luther Strange, the candidate Trump backed, lost Tuesday to firebrand jurist Roy Moore by nine points.

Trump quickly endorsed Moore and his tweets backing Strange were deleted.

A former Democrat who is ideologica­lly flexible, Trump has been an awkward partner for Republican leaders since the start of his political rise. But McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan have privately tried to rally their members during low points in the presidency by reminding them that Trump will sign legislatio­n a Democratic occupant of the Oval Office would not — despite the fact that the GOP Congress hasn’t had any major bills to send to Trump’s desk.

The White House has promised GOP leaders that Trump will indeed travel the country selling the tax legislatio­n. Trump advisers have told congressio­nal lawmakers and aides that the president is more deeply engaged on taxes than on any other domestic policy push during his tenure, according to a Republican official who was one of six GOP aides and operatives who insisted on anonymity in order to discuss the president’s standing with his party.

But Republican­s have heard similar promises from the White House before. Trump ultimately invested little time and energy trying to rally public support behind two GOP bids to overhaul the nation’s health care system. As the party scrambled to salvage last-ditch legislatio­n this week, Trump seemed more focused on stirring up controvers­y about protests during the national anthem by NFL players. McConnell pulled the bill without holding a vote.

Sara Fagen, a Republican strategist who served as White House political director for President George W. Bush, said that for Trump to be a successful advocate for tax reform, he’ll have to repeatedly rally Americans behind the effort and personaliz­e the impact of the tax changes for the middle class.

“If he just sits in the upper floor of the White House after 7 p.m. and fires off tweets, that’s not going to help,” Fagen said.

Trump’s event in Indiana Wednesday got the campaign off to a convention­al start. Standing in front of a massive American flag, the president largely stuck to script and talked about the tax plan with specificit­y. He called on both parties to join forces on an overhaul, despite the fact that the blueprint he outlined was negotiated by Republican­s alone.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump talks to the media as he walks from Marine One to the White House in Washington on Wednesday as he returns from Indianapol­is. AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER
President Donald Trump talks to the media as he walks from Marine One to the White House in Washington on Wednesday as he returns from Indianapol­is. AP PHOTO/CAROLYN KASTER

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