Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In Trump limbo, Ryan waits

- IN MY OPINION CHRISTIAN SCHNEIDER

CBS News Chief White House Correspond­ent Major Garrett has put his finger squarely on what makes covering President Donald Trump so difficult: It is the challenge of “separating the interestin­g from the important.”

In a recent podcast, Garrett noted that there are plenty of things that happen in the Trump White House that are “fascinatin­g,” “interestin­g” and “great clickbait.” He added there are other more important, long-lasting things happening in federal agencies — yet boring appointmen­ts and regulation­s are difficult to cover with the “velocity and volume” of what comes out of the Trump White House.

House Speaker Paul Ryan dreams of a world in which the important and the interestin­g merge into one. Rather than being dogged by questions about Trump’s inexplicab­le behavior on an hourly basis, he’d prefer explaining all the House bills that would make an actual difference in citizens’ lives.

Oh, Trump has said there were “very fine people“at a Nazi rally? Ryan would be happy to tell you about the bill the House passed providing aid to those addicted to opioids . What’s that you say? Trump slandered an early 20th-century American general in a tweet that approved of shooting Muslims to send terrorists a “message”? Perhaps you’d like to hear Ryan’s thoughts on the need to repeal and replace Obamacare. Honestly, rather than talking about why the president spells the word “heal” as “heel,” wouldn’t you rather hear Ryan’s thoughts about the need for tax reform?

Certainly, the exchanges in which Ryan refuses to directly condemn Trump can be excruciati­ng. Pressed once again to criticize the president at a recent CNN town hall, Ryan again mostly demurred, saying Trump “messed up” when attributin­g racial violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., to “both

sides.” But Ryan squirmed as he sidesteppe­d directly criticizin­g Trump, leaving viewers at home wishing there was something on television more comfortabl­e to watch, such as a live human birth.

Ryan knows that laws passed by Congress are etched on the nation forever, or until a new legislatur­e changes them. They are printed right there, in the federal code, in black and white. There is no asterisk next to a federal law warning that “this provision was signed by a president who mocked a cable news host’s plastic surgery, so best of luck with that.”

If Ryan were to awaken the grumpy orange giant, Trump might go to war with him, as he has with other natural allies such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. This brings into play the “Ryan Paradox” — the conservati­ves who most want to see Ryan’s conservati­ve agenda enacted are also the most likely to want him to excoriate his party’s toddler president. Yet the tighter Ryan squeezes Trump on the interestin­g, the looser his grip gets on the important.

Ryan clearly knows that full GOP control of the federal government is a precious thing, so he continues to play the long game. He’s willing to suffer the humiliatio­n wrought by his president in order to make change.

Naturally, Ryan’s patience has its limits. Trump has made his political career being only slightly more popular than other things that are really unpopular: Hillary Clinton, Congress, the media and groping, for a start. As soon as Trump’s popularity drops to the point where he’s harming the electoral prospects of individual House members, Ryan may disassocia­te himself completely from the GOP president.

Until then, however, Ryan will have to continue executing the mundane duties of a job he never really wanted in the first place, as his public standing slowly sinks. He will focus on the important, hoping that future statute books reflect his accomplish­ments.

Then Ryan will need to cross his fingers and hope future history books are as kind.

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