Starkville Daily News

Yes and yes

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President Donald Trump's historic, televised meeting this Tuesday on immigratio­n reform proved that he seeks to lead all

Americans — not just his base. Seated between Sen.

Dick Durbin, DIll., and Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md.,

Trump appeared to defer to legislator­s, while encouragin­g them to get to work on legislatio­n regarding immigratio­n, the wall and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

"President Trump offered support for sweeping immigratio­n legislatio­n at a White House meeting on Tuesday, sending the signal he's willing to embrace a bipartisan deal in a midterm election year with the GOP's congressio­nal majorities in play," wrote Jordan Fabian Tuesday in an article published in The Hill, which carried this headline: "Trump says he'll take heat for immigratio­n deal."

While some might view the president's move as political suicide, or at least confusing, the American people don't agree. They are looking for action and accomplish­ments from their elected officials. A Gallup Survey released October 9, 2017, (random sample of 1,022 adults, conducted Sept. 6-10, 2017, sampling error +/- 4 percentage points) provides the data. "Fifty-four percent of Americans want political leaders in Washington to compromise to get things done. This far outpaces the 18 percent who would prefer that leaders stick to their beliefs even if little gets done, while the views of 28 percent fall somewhere in between. The gap between compromise and sticking to principles is the widest in Gallup's trend."

With tax reform behind him, new limits on government­al regulation, and the stock market booming, Trump has the opportunit­y to make real progress on immigratio­n. Yes, he can!

A core difference between traditiona­l Republican­s and Democrats is their divergent beliefs regarding how much government should be involved in people's lives. Historical­ly, the parties have been divided between more government for Democrats and less government for Republican­s. But we are seeing that the issues that Democrats have traditiona­lly sought to solve via government interventi­on can be addressed more effectivel­y by people, corporatio­ns, and communitie­s. Republican­s believe that, as we continue to grow economical­ly, this will become more apparent.

Former CEO of CKE Restaurant­s Andy Puzder's op-ed, "Raise Wages via Growth, Not Mandates," in the Wall Street Journal this past Sunday is a great example. "President Trump's regulatory rollback is driving an economic surge few anticipate­d. Tax reform promises to accelerate that growth by encouragin­g business investment and eliminatin­g the perverse incentives that drive companies, jobs and investment­s to other countries. The true test for these pro-growth policies is whether they result in a more participat­ory economy, in which workers' incomes meaningful­ly increase over the long run. The early results are promising."

If regulation­s drive up wages, there could be unintended consequenc­es: a loss of full time positions, less investment and fewer new hires. Real change comes from real work, not more regulation.

As the economy improves, there will be fewer hard economic issues for Democrats to pursue and they will turn to softer, emotional issues. By taking on and solving immigratio­n and DACA, Trump can Trump them.

In an effort to push for action during Tuesday's meeting, Trump provided cover for both sides. "I think my positions are going to be what the people in this room come up with," Trump said, "I'll take the heat off both the Democrats and the Republican­s."

In my column last week, "Hard Work, Real Communicat­ion," I wrote "while both Republican­s and Democrats support some type of protection, they differ on the details, as they do for Trump's proposal to build a physical wall between the United States and Mexico. Republican­s should address this as

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 ??  ?? JACKIE GINGRICH CUSHMAN
JACKIE GINGRICH CUSHMAN

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