Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump, GOP Congress relish tax plan, court picks

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s unpredicta­ble, pugnacious approach to the presidency often worked against him as Republican­s navigated a tumultuous but ultimately productive year in Congress.

Trump’s major accomplish­ments, confirmati­on of conservati­ve Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch and a major tax cut, actually came with relatively little drama.

Several shutdown deadlines came and went, and a default on the government’s debt was averted, thanks to a momentary rapprochem­ent with top Democrats, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Chuck Schumer.

But a promised solution to the plight of young immigrants brought to the country illegally as infants or children was delayed, while a routine reauthoriz­ation of a program providing health care to 9 million low-income kids stalled as well.

A catchall spending deal in May got relatively little attention for what it accomplish­ed, overshadow­ed by Trump’s threat to shut the government down if he didn’t get a better deal the next time. But there was no next time — and about $1.2 trillion in unfinished agency budgets got punted into the new year.

Several mass shootings around the country and the near-assassinat­ion of House GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana failed to dislodge legislatio­n on background checks or so-called bump stocks, though Scalise made an emotional return to the Capitol in the fall. McCain was diagnosed with a deadly form of brain cancer — and soon after cast a decisive vote against the Senate’s health care bill.

The nation’s debate on sexual misconduct swept over the Capitol as well, forcing the resignatio­ns of Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich. and Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn. Several other lawmakers announced premature retirement­s and the somnolent Ethics Committee launched a handful of investigat­ions, too.

Retirement­s, often evidence that lawmakers think a wave election may be looming, came in bunches, with more likely after lawmakers spend time with their families over the holidays. Democrats eyed the districts of GOP Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, Frank Lobiondo of New Jersey, Dave Trott of Michigan, and Charlie Dent of Pennsylvan­ia as potential pickups.

Then there was the Alabama special election to fill the seat of Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Establishm­ent Republican­s such as McConnell swung forcefully behind appointed Sen. Luther Strange, but firebrand conservati­ve Roy Moore still took the nomination. Then, after several women said he’d molested or dated them as teenagers more than four decades ago, Moore lost the long-held GOP seat to Democrat Doug Jones.

The longstandi­ng goal of repealing the Affordable Care Act consumed Republican­s for months. The effort squeaked through the House — after being left for dead at least once — in a process that exposed fissures in GOP ranks and whipped Democrats and their political base into a frenzy.

But in the Senate, it was clear from the start that the “repeal and replace” push faced a slog, and afterward it seemed as if several moderate Republican­s simply didn’t want to get to “yes.”

After the GOP’s health care debacle, failure wasn’t an option on taxes.

The effort was far more focused and organized — and it paid off. While Trump’s grasp of health care legislatio­n was spotty at best, his cheerleadi­ng helped on taxes. It also helped, as House Speaker Paul Ryan of Minnesotal said in an interview, that Republican­s “are more or less wired the same” on taxes.

Still, taxes consumed most of the fall, and during the debate GOP leaders were reluctant to take any chances by angering Republican­s on other topics such as the immigratio­n and the budget.

That meant talks with Democrats faltered — and left a huge pile of unfinished business until next year, including disaster aid, immigratio­n, and budget increases for the Pentagon.

“We have big things that have to be done,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., a top leadership strategist and enforcer. With the tax overhaul done, he said, “the calendar opens up and we can actually start moving forward on a bunch of these different items.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? President Donald Trump, with members of Congress and supporters, speaks Dec. 20 on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, after passage of the tax bill.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO President Donald Trump, with members of Congress and supporters, speaks Dec. 20 on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, after passage of the tax bill.

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