Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump shouldn’t fight with the Kochs

Taking on huge Republican donors is not a way for the president to win re-election in 2020 or the midterms in November, warns GOP political strategist

- ED ROGERS Ed Rogers is a political consultant and a veteran of the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush White Houses and several national campaigns. He is the chairman of the lobbying and communicat­ions firm BGR Group, which he founded with former Mississi

The president has another opportunit­y to be magnanimou­s, show himself to be the bigger man and to take a pass on fueling a fight with fellow Republican­s. OK, that won’t happen. But it doesn’t mean the Trump-Koch dispute that flared in recent days should be ignored.

I’ve never worked with the Koch brothers, but they are an important resource for Republican­s. You can argue about whether they should have done this or that or funded this or that program, but without question, Charles and David Koch have been a huge net plus for the Republican Party and the conservati­ve cause. It is undeniable that the work they do creates more allies for President Donald Trump in Congress and in state and local government­s.

But rather than nurture this asset, Mr. Trump is antagonizi­ng the very people who can help Republican­s in 2018 and 2020. I can’t say exactly how the Venn diagram would look, but I suspect Mr. Trump and the Koch brothers overlap on about 90 percent of the issues they both care about.

As president, Mr. Trump is the leader of the Republican Party. As such, he is supposed to be the steward of the Republican coalition in America. He can’t rely just on his piece of the coalition to win the next presidenti­al election, let alone the upcoming midterms. It wasn’t just a narrow slice of Trumpkin voters who produced his upset victory in 2016.

Team Trump would be wise to remember the words of my old boss, Lee Atwater, that the Republican Party is a “big tent.” There are plenty of Republican­s who are prochoice, pro-free trade and pro-gay rights and who think the United States could stand to reduce its military footprint abroad and be more aggressive about cutting deficits. Mr. Trump received much of their support in 2016. The GOP can’t abandon those voters in 2018, and Mr.Trump will need them in 2020 to have any chance at re-election.

Maybe Mr. Trump is resentful at some level of the Koch brothers’ successes. Or maybe he has a chip on his shoulder because they’ve been outspoken at times about his demeanor. Or maybe it is all about trade policy. But as the Wall Street Journal editorial board aptly put it Wednesday, “Pro-growth cuts in tax rates, deregulati­on and originalis­t judges have been the most successful parts of the Trump agenda. And they were Koch beliefs when Mr. Trump was still donating to Bill and Hillary Clinton.” That may not be what the president wants to hear, but it is the truth.

With that said, the Trump-Koch feud hasn’t escalated to a point beyond repair. And, thankfully, Mr. Trump’s bark when directed at Republican­s often doesn’t go any further. Just ask Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., Mitch McConnell , R-Ky., or Marc Rubio, R-Fla.

Once again, Republican­s are doing what the Democrats want us to do. I’m sure the Democrats are delighted at the idea that the source of several hundreds of millions of dollars for Republican­s is being harassed and hounded by the incumbent Republican machinery. I know it’s not fashionabl­e in the Republican Party today, but it is worth repeating: Politics is all about addition, not subtractio­n. If the Koch organizati­on is alienated, that subtracts money and people.

Even if the president doesn’t want to do the right thing, he would be well served by doing the selfish thing and keeping the Republican big tent as big as it was when he got elected.

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