Los Angeles Times

GOP agenda will be uphill climb

With a slimmer majority, Republican­s prepare to take on crucial, long-stalled priorities in 2018.

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Congress returns to work this week with unfinished business on spending, immigratio­n and other crucial issues, but with an even narrower GOP majority that will make it tougher to move on President Trump’s agenda.

The House and Senate will convene Wednesday, swearing in the newly elected Democratic senator from Alabama, Doug Jones, and Minnesota’s Tina Smith to replace a fellow Democrat, Sen. Al Franken, who is resigning as the latest highprofil­e public figure sidelined by allegation­s of sexual misconduct. The change gives Republican­s only a one-seat margin in the Senate.

Trump, fresh off passage of the GOP tax cuts, is pushing lawmakers to pivot quickly on his new year priorities of infrastruc­ture investment and immigratio­n, as well as his foreign policy agenda.

But another legislativ­e victory seems far off. Republican­s have struggled to hold their majority together, and Congress first must tackle crucial stalled agenda items that leaders punted to 2018.

In the short run, Congress must fund the government by Jan. 19 or face a potential federal shutdown when a temporary spending measure expires that was hastily approved before lawmakers recessed for the

holidays.

Along with the funding deadline will be a push by Democrats — and an increasing number of Republican­s — to tack on a legislativ­e solution for the so-called Dreamers, the young immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children whose work permits and deportatio­n protection­s are set to expire.

Dreamers have become a powerful political presence, with daily protests at the Capitol, putting enormous pressure on lawmakers to block the spending bill unless it includes new protection­s for them. Some 800,000 young people will begin to be at risk of deportatio­n — 1,000 a day — when Trump winds down the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in March.

“On DACA, there is a deal to be had,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who is part of a bipartisan group of senators working on legislatio­n, said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “I want to do it in January. I don’t want to wait until March.”

But House and Senate leaders first need to resolve the funding bill standoff, which hit an impasse last month as Trump and congressio­nal leaders could not agree upon new budget levels for the remainder of fiscal 2018 or the scope of disaster aid for the unusually devastatin­g hurricane and wildfire season.

Trump and most Republican­s want to boost military spending, but Democrats are insisting on a commensura­te increase in non-defense-related accounts for other federal government operations. Recent talks at the White House did not produce an agreement.

Democrats are also pushing for more disaster funding after an $81-billion aid package — which would be the biggest ever — stalled in the Senate. They are particular­ly seeking better treatment for Puerto Rico, where large areas remain without electricit­y almost four months after Hurricane Maria.

Even as the minority in Congress, Democrats have leverage in negotiatio­ns because House Speaker Paul D. Ryan often has been unable to rally his Republican majority to approve spending bills over the objections of his party’s most conservati­ve deficit hawks. Moreover, such measures need 60 votes for passage in the Senate.

The Republican math has been complicate­d by absences, notably as Arizona Sen. John McCain battles brain cancer back home. He is expected to return to Washington this month.

“Paul Ryan’s going to have to have the courage to tell the hard right they cannot run the government,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.) said last month after Jones’ election in Alabama.

Jones stunned Washington when his upstart campaign routed controvers­ial former judge Roy Moore, the Republican nominee in the special election to replace Jeff Sessions, the state’s longtime senator who became Trump’s attorney general. Moore faced allegation­s of child molestatio­n from dating teenagers when he was a county prosecutor in his 30s.

The arrival of Jones, a former federal prosecutor who won conviction­s of Ku Klux Klan members decades after the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, not only bolsters the Democratic minority in the Senate, 51-49, but gives the party a potential electoral path in GOP stronghold­s heading toward the midterm election 10 months from now.

Polls show an uptick in voter preference for Democrats, as Trump’s own low approval numbers stagnate, signaling the start of a spirited election season.

Trump has just a few short months to make progress on his legislativ­e agenda before lawmakers will want to turn more attention to their campaigns back home as Republican­s fight to retain the majority in Congress.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Ryan and other GOP leaders are expected to meet with Trump in coming days to map out the 2018 agenda.

Ryan, of Wisconsin, has outlined his plans for overhaulin­g entitlemen­ts — particular­ly cuts to welfare programs — but McConnell has signaled he is less interested in those issues as the Senate targets other priorities, including healthcare.

McConnell has promised votes, expected this month, on legislatio­n to soften premium hikes under the Affordable Care Act. But passage remains in doubt because other Republican­s want to try again at repealing the healthcare law known as Obamacare.

Trump’s plans for a $1trillion infrastruc­ture package remain uncertain, limited in part because the GOP tax-cut package — which permanentl­y slashes corporate rates and temporaril­y reduces some individual taxes — added $1.5 trillion to the deficit, making additional government spending unlikely.

“We gave one of the biggest, largest tax cuts to the wealthy,” Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-N.Y.) said on CBS. “We’re going to be paying for this for many, many years to come.”

Rep. Mark Meadows (RN.C.), the influentia­l chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, said he expected the House to revisit the tax bill by voting to make the individual tax breaks, which expire in 2025, permanent. “You’ll see a vote on that in the first 30 days,” Meadows predicted.

But neither Republican­s, nor Democrats, want to be seen by voters as threatenin­g a government shutdown, which has proved unpopular in the past, pressuring them to the negotiatin­g table as soon as Congress convenes.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? AFTER the GOP tax-cut victory last month, President Trump wants Republican leaders to focus on infrastruc­ture, immigratio­n and his foreign policy priorities.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images AFTER the GOP tax-cut victory last month, President Trump wants Republican leaders to focus on infrastruc­ture, immigratio­n and his foreign policy priorities.
 ?? Brian Cahn Zuma Press ?? DOUG JONES will be sworn in Wednesday as Alabama’s new senator, giving the Democrats 49 seats.
Brian Cahn Zuma Press DOUG JONES will be sworn in Wednesday as Alabama’s new senator, giving the Democrats 49 seats.

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