Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump health care pitch clouded by — Trump

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — For weeks observers were wondering when President Donald Trump would focus on pushing recalcitra­nt Republican­s to back a Senate bill to repeal and possibly replace Obamacare — so that Trump and GOP lawmakers could keep faith with a key campaign pledge dear to the GOP base.

Wednesday Trump seized his bully pulpit. He invited all 52 Republican senators to the White House for a lunch at which he called out Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev., in a way that left no doubt among other GOP Hamlets that if they voted against Trumpcare, it could cost

TRUMP

them their jobs.

More than that, Trump had stopped hopscotchi­ng between legislativ­e alternativ­es and finally laid out a commanding and persuasive conservati­ve case for a Senate bill to repeal and replace former President Barack Obama’s signature health care package. He warned, “Any senator who votes against starting debate is really telling America that you’re fine with Obamacare.” Trump’s strong words promised to make it more difficult for diffident Republican­s to oppose a Republican bill.

As the 49 senators who came to the White House were leaving, three New York Times reporters prepared to interview the president.

Trusted aide Hope Hicks escorted Peter Baker, Maggie Haberman and Michael S. Schmidt into the Oval Office. “Hi fellas, how you doing?” Trump greeted the trio. Then followed a 50-minute everything-butthe-kitchen-sink rant that was sure to dominate the news and replace Trump’s Senate lunch squeeze as cable news’ top story.

Sure enough, the three-byline story was the main topic of Thursday’s White House press briefing. East Coast news staples like MSNBC’S “Morning Joe” spent Thursday morning digesting morsels from the New York Times interview, such as Trump’s assertion that he never would have asked Jeff Sessions to be his attorney general if he had known Sessions would recuse himself from a federal probe into Russian election meddling.

Once again, Trump left supporters wondering why the otherwise media-savvy president can’t stop stepping on his own message.

“You’d almost think it’s by design,” said Kurt Bardella, a former Breitbart spokesman now head of his own messaging and communicat­ions firm — except that Trump rarely benefits. “A week that’s supposed to be about health care,” said Bardella, “and he gives an interview where he throws his attorney general under the bus.”

It was a strategic communicat­ions error in the same brand as the March 4 tweet in which Trump accused Obama of wiretappin­g phones at Trump Tower — right after Trump delivered a wildly received address to a joint session of Congress. Trump had been basking in the afterglow of that bipartisan-themed event.

One tweet, Bardella noted, “and there goes that conversati­on.”

Trump voters are left with the choice of supporting his idiosyncra­tic style or questionin­g it.

Jim Hartman, a resident of the Nevada town of Genoa, who has been a delegate to four Republican National Convention­s, sees a presidency that is “going from serious condition to critical.”

Hartman wishes Trump would heed his lawyer’s advice or that of the Wall Street Journal editorial page. Hartman believes Trump will

continue to hold onto his base — a “rock solid 36 to 40 percent of the electorate” — but parties don’t win elections with 40 percent or less of the vote.

Hartman also fears Trump is underminin­g his ability to get things done. “How do you refocus people onto health care if you’re off message?”

Conservati­ve author Tom Del Beccaro doesn’t see a big problem. “Yes, it steps on his short-term message,” Del Beccaro said from California, “but it is close to his long-play message, which is: This place is a mess and I need to drain the swamp.”

The problem is, as Bardella sees it, Trump “doesn’t move on from these things.”

While some supporters fault the media for covering Trump pronouncem­ents more closely than Trump policies, Bardella noted, “He is the most powerful person in the world,” so what the president says is news.

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or at 202-662-7391. Follow @ Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

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