Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

McCain flap casts shadow over Trump’s GOP lunch

- By Lisa Mascaro and Anne Flaherty Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Last fall, when President Donald Trump headed to Capitol Hill for the Senate Republican lunch, he was feuding with the powerful chair of the foreign relations panel and tweeted that the man couldn’t get elected dog catcher.

On Tuesday, he dropped in on the weekly GOP lunch entangled in a controvers­y over an aide’s comment disparagin­g ailing GOP Sen. John McCain. At least one attendee said the McCain flap never came up, but several of the GOP leaders have said it’s past time for an apology from the White House.

“The smart thing to do would have been five days ago to just nip it in the bud and come out and apologize for it,” said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 3 Senate Republican.

Trump’s Capitol Hill lunch Tuesday with Senate Republican­s comes as the White House and its GOP allies are trying to coalesce around a political message ahead of the midterm elections. Also on the agenda is the White House push to get Senate approval of Trump’s nominee for CIA director, as well as Trump’s upcoming summit with North Korea.

But much like when Trump was headed to the GOP Senate lunch to talk policy in October 2017, the White House agenda was eclipsed by another story.

During a closed-door meeting last week White House communicat­ions aide Kelly Sadler dismissed McCain’s opposition to the CIA nominee by saying of the Arizona Republican: “He’s dying anyway.” The 81-year-old McCain was diagnosed in July with glioblasto­ma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.

Sadler has apologized to the McCain family privately, but McCain’s daughter has asked for a public apology. The White House, which has appeared more focused on the leak than its substance, has said it has dealt with the matter internally — but has refused to say how.

In a Trump tweet Monday, said “so-called leaks” were a “massive over exaggerati­on” but added: “With that being said, leakers are traitors and cowards, and we will find out who they are!”

The issue has left senators unsettled. . The “person who said that should apologize and apologize publicly,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday of Sadler.

When Trump attended the October Senate GOP luncheon, he was locked into a public feud with Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee. Corker had accused the president of intentiona­lly being divisive and untruthful, and compared the White House to an “adult day care center.”

The morning of the luncheon, Trump tweeted that Corker “couldn’t get elected dog catcher in Tennessee.”

On Tuesday, Corker said that none of the senators raised the McCain issue.

“That’s not what we do in these meetings,” he said. “No one would have brought up something like that.” many

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