Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP senators reject Trump’s blaming of Congress for Russia rift

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Republican senators said Thursday that President Donald Trump was wrong to blame Congress for deteriorat­ing relations with Russia. Lawmakers instead faulted Russia for allegedly meddling in last year’s U.S. elections and for its interventi­ons in other countries.

“I was shocked by that,” conservati­ve Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said of Trump’s claim. “Because relations with Russia are in a bad place, and it’s entirely because of [Russian President] Vladimir Putin, it’s not because of Congress.”

Trump sparked the latest dispute with an early-morning tweet that seemed prompted by a package of sanctions against Russia that he reluctantl­y signed on Wednesday. “Our relationsh­ip with Russia is at an all-time & very dangerous low. You can thank Congress, the same people that can’t even give us HCare!” he wrote.

Moderate Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine countered that friction with Russia is because of its actions in Ukraine and Syria and its election interferen­ce. “So that’s the reason we’re at a bad point with Russia, because of Russia’s egregious behavior,” Collins said.

The pushback was only the latest instance in which GOP lawmakers have readily confronted Trump. His dismal poll numbers and shifting and vague positions on legislativ­e issues give them plenty of leeway to distance themselves from him.

Just last week, Republican defections led to the rejection of three GOP proposals to roll back President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, dealing Trump a defeat on his top legislativ­e priority to date.

Republican­s also have defended Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the former Alabama GOP senator, against Trump criticism and threats of firing him and are mulling bipartisan legislatio­n that would protect Special Counsel Robert Mueller from being dismissed by Trump.

“I think that’s a misjudging of why we have a bad problem with Russia. We have a bad problem with Russia because of Putin, not the Congress,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

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