Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump will cut deals

Democrats ought to reach out to him

- Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen is a columnist for The Washington Post.

When Donald Trump first took office, many conservati­ves’ greatest fear was that he would be too quick to cut deals with the Democrats. He had previously been a Democrat and had staked out heterodox positions on everything from spending to entitlemen­t reform, the national debt, the minimum wage, trade and health care. During the 2016 campaign, Mr. Trump even endorsed universal health care, declaring, “This is an un-Republican thing for me to say … I am going to take care of everybody … [and] the government’s gonna pay for it.” Conservati­ves were aghast.

They need not have worried. Democrats showed little interest in negotiatin­g bipartisan bills with President Trump. They preferred to be the “resistance.” And their unrelentin­g opposition pushed Mr. Trump to the right. He knew that whatever he was going to get done, he would have to do it with Republican votes. So, he governed as a staunch conservati­ve.

But that is not his place of natural equilibriu­m. In his heart, Mr. Trump is a dealmaker, not an ideologue. And now, he’s making clear that he wants to cut deals with Rep. Nancy Pelosi, DCalif.

It was overshadow­ed by his confrontat­ion with CNN’s Jim Acosta, but during his post-midterm-election news conference, Mr. Trump made clear that he is willing — even eager — to buck House Republican­s and work with Ms. Pelosi and the new Democratic majority. On health care, for example, Mr. Trump stunned Republican­s when he said he would be willing to support a bipartisan bill that passes with Democratic votes. “We’ll get the Democrats and we’ll get the Republican­s, or some of the Republican­s,” Mr. Trump declared. That’s a remarkable statement. The president would sign a health care bill that gets a majority of Democratic, but not Republican, votes.

Similarly, on taxes, Mr. Trump announced he was willing to revisit the terms of his signature legislativ­e achievemen­t — his tax-reform law — in exchange for a middle-class tax cut. Asked whether he would be willing to raise rates on corporatio­ns and the wealthy, Mr. Trump said, “I would absolutely pursue something even if it means some adjustment.” That’s a huge concession to the Democrats.

Indeed, Mr. Trump even said it was better that Democrats won control of the House because it frees him to negotiate. “If the Republican­s won — and let’s say we held on by two, or one, or three — it would’ve been very hard,” Mr. Trump said, “... because there will always be one, or two, or three people that, for a good reason or for a bad reason, or for grandstand­ing … come over and say, you know, ‘Look, we’re not going to along with this.’ ““With Democrats in the majority, he said, “we have a much easier path, because the Democrats will come to us with a plan for infrastruc­ture, a plan for health care, a plan for whatever they are looking at, and we’ll negotiate.” Translatio­n: Now I can tell the House Freedom Caucus to take a hike and compromise with Democrats instead.

The big question: Will House Democrats take him up on it? If they start firing shots at Mr. Trump focusing on investigat­ions and impeachmen­t, he’s going to fire back. But if they accept his outstretch­ed hand, they will find he’s willing to give Democrats a lot of things they want — even over GOP objections.

Mr. Trump hopes Ms. Pelosi becomes House speaker, because he thinks she will be less interested in impeachmen­t and more interested in deals. “She deserves it,” he said at his news conference, adding, “If she has a problem, I think I would be able to very easily supply her the necessary votes” to become speaker. He knows Ms. Pelosi will serve for only a few years and wants to secure a legacy. She wants to pass an infrastruc­ture bill, fix and secure Obamacare and modify his tax cuts. And he seems willing to work with her to do all that. If anything, Ms. Pelosi’s challenge will be to control her own ideologues who want to use their newfound power to destroy Mr. Trump, not work with him.

But if Democrats are willing to make concession­s, such as funding the border wall, they will find Mr. Trump willing to buck conservati­ve orthodoxy and make major concession­s to them. Indeed, if they play their cards right, they can rack up wins on everything from health care and taxes to infrastruc­ture and even immigratio­n.

But to do that, Democrats have to decide: Are they now a governing majority? Or are they a resistance? Because they can’t be both.

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