Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

GOP looks to Oval Office to set lines

Leadership majority craves from White House proving elusive

- By Lisa Mascaro Washington Bureau lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — By now, Republican­s in Congress thought they would be working closely with the White House on signature items of the GOP agenda — repealing and replacing Obamacare, overhaulin­g the tax code.

Many hoped President Donald Trump would play the classic executive’s role: rolling up his sleeves to chart the direction, settle disputes and spend his political capital to bring wayward lawmakers in line.

But instead, Trump has been reluctant to take charge of Republican­s’ policy priorities, and GOP lawmakers worry their early momentum is fading amid intraparty squabbles over legislatio­n and Trump’s tendency to flit from topic to topic when what they most need now is focus.

The Republican majority has been left hungering for leadership and bickering among themselves over what to do next.

“We could use a unifier, and he can be it,” said Rep. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., an early Trump ally who remains close to the White House. “We need (him) to put some pressure on all of us to come together — and to reassure us that he has all of our backs.”

Usually, a new administra­tion has the greatest political advantage early on, in the glow of an electoral honeymoon and before the calendar gets bogged down with unforeseen crises.

Trump has been busy issuing executive orders and signing smaller-scale bills into law, but he only began to provide details of his biggest proposals this week during his joint address to Congress, 40 days into his presidency.

He leaned in to House Republican­s’ plan for repealing and replacing Obamacare by signaling a preference for providing tax credits for Americans to buy health insurance.

Trump also spoke of taxing imports as a way of leveling the playing field for domestic manufactur­ers, giving a nod to the House GOP’s blueprint for tax reform, even though his comments were less fullthroat­ed than some would have liked and did not resolve his past flip-flops on the so-called border adjustment tax.

Both of those issues have deeply divided Republican­s in Congress as they hammer out details of their two biggest campaign promises – ending Obamacare and reforming the tax code.

Whether Trump will fight for the ideas he floated Tuesday or leave the details to House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., remains to be seen. The legislativ­e process is expected to take months.

“President Trump will need to do more than merely wait upon a Republican Congress to produce the legislatio­n he has championed,” wrote Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., in a New York Times op-ed. “He must become an active participan­t in the legislativ­e process.”

The longer Trump waits to chart the way, the easier for others to fill the void.

“Nature abhors a vacuum,” said Republican Rep. Mark Sanford of South Carolina, the state’s former governor. “As a consequenc­e, you’re seeing an attempt to fill in the blanks.”

Already, Trump’s onetime campaign rivals, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, have spoken against the tax credits in the House GOP health care plan.

Conservati­ve critics, including Sen. Mike Lee, RUtah, and the House’s Freedom Caucus, view refundable credits as another federal government entitlemen­t program like the Obamacare subsidies that help some Americans buy insurance.

The three senators derisively opposed the House GOP plan as “Obamacarel­ite.”

“We’re not just going along with whatever they try to shove down our throats,” Paul, the Kentucky Republican, said on CNN. “Conservati­ves will be listened to or there won’t be a repeal.”

Their pushback was significan­t because Congress would not likely have enough votes to pass the Obamacare replacemen­t without them, despite the party’s majority hold on both chambers.

The alliance between Republican­s in Congress and Trump in the White House was always expected to be tenuous.

Most Republican lawmakers did not initially back Trump for president.

They did, however, support the prospects of oneparty control of the House, the Senate and the White House.

Lawmakers who want him to jump into legislativ­e process are also mindful of ceding too much influence to a president who could swoop in and upend their painstakin­g policy work with his own ideas.

“It’s really not an area that I would say of getting the White House to come tell us what to do,” said Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., who blamed Democratic delay tactics for the “painfully slow” start of the legislativ­e session.

“The White House has to step out and say, ‘Here are the key things I’ll sign and I won’t sign,’ ” he said. “We’re all setting up parameters of the debate.”

White House Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders acknowledg­ed Wednesday a delay in churning out the “nittygritt­y” policies, but blamed the Senate for taking so long to confirm Trump’s Cabinet.

“As they build out and they get confirmed, you are going to see a lot more interactio­n down in the weeds,” she said during an interview in the West Wing, noting that Republican leaders from the House and the Senate were eating lunch with Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.

Wednesday’s White House lunch was “about charting out the agenda and the timeline,” said press secretary Sean Spicer.

But Trump does not always share policy prescripti­ons with his Republican allies in Congress and is, at times, still forming his own.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump meets with GOP House and Senate leaders. Republican­s are eager to push their agenda forward.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump meets with GOP House and Senate leaders. Republican­s are eager to push their agenda forward.

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