Texarkana Gazette

Paul Ryan: Good, bad and truly disappoint­ing

- Patrica Murphy

It’s hard to excel in a job you never wanted in the first place. That seems to be one of the primary takeaways from the three years Paul Ryan served as House speaker since Republican­s practicall­y begged him to step into the void they created when they ran John Boehner off from the job in 2015.

Add to Ryan’s burden the fact that he had to work with a president who was his opposite in every measure but party affiliatio­n, and it’s easy to think Ryan’s speakershi­p was doomed from the start. But it wasn’t all bad for the gentleman from Janesville. Let’s review. The good

Paul Ryan. If there’s one thing Republican­s will eternally owe Paul Ryan, it’s that he never made the tumultuous last two years worse than they could have been Not only was Ryan’s goodguy image genuine, but his down-to-Earth decency and self-restraint were also an important counterbal­ance to the bottomless scandals down the street in the West Wing.

Anti-poverty agenda. In the months after the 2012 elections, Ryan quietly traveled the country with Bob Woodson, a civil rights activist, to visit impoverish­ed communitie­s around the country. The two traveled once a month for two years to inform the anti-poverty agenda that Ryan hoped to pursue as chairman of the

Ways and Means Committee.

Ryan’s focus on poverty didn’t get much attention during his speakershi­p, and it certainly wasn’t a centerpiec­e of his or any GOP agenda. But Ryan did manage to move a few discrete items to address income inequality in larger bills.

Tax reform. As the holy grail of Republican policy goals, it would have been unacceptab­le for a Republican-led House not to deliver a tax reform package to President Donald Trump, especially after Republican­s’ failure to repeal Obamacare as promised in 2017. Ryan drove passage of the bill, even on the days when West Wing drama threatened to stall it completely.

That the tax cuts also rang up massive deficits and threaten to explode the national debt is a topic for the next section …

The bad

Debt and deficits. If there was a more passionate evangelist against the evils of government debt and deficits over the last 20 years than Rep. Paul Ryan, it is hard to think of one. When he unexpected­ly ascended to the speakershi­p in 2015, many in Washington assumed he would quickly advance an agenda to achieve what he had preached for so long—a program to shrink the debt into balance, even if it hurt.

But with Trump (the self-proclaimed “king of debt”) in the White House, Ryan oversaw a massive escalation of debt-financed defense spending, along with tax cuts that have failed to throw off the increased revenue that supply-siders long promised would materializ­e if they could pass their ideal legislatio­n. The result has been a nearly 80 percent increase in annual deficits during Ryan’s tenure, along with a projected $1.5 trillion increase in the projected debt over 10 years.

Republican­s lost the House. Anyone who covered the 2018 midterm elections knows that it was Donald Trump, not Paul Ryan, on the minds of voters when they were casting their ballots to oust Republican­s from power. So blaming Ryan for the loss of the House is like blaming the dog for getting hit by the car. But why was the dog in the street in the first place? Had Ryan managed to make the House Intelligen­ce Committee seem less complicit, or encouraged other committees to delve into worrisome conflicts of interest throughout the administra­tion, it’s possible the House losses would have been less severe. But we’ll never know, since Ryan chose to keep his criticism of the president private, and the House’s public posture toward the administra­tion almost entirely supportive.

The truly disappoint­ing What could have been. When Ryan became speaker, there was an overarchin­g sense of possibilit­y shared by Republican­s and Democrats alike that he could become a breakout leader. As a young congressma­n and Jack Kemp protege, he was known as an affable, committed policy wonk. He seemed to care genuinely about poverty issues, but was also admired by conservati­ves for his commitment to the un-sexy work of balancing budgets. What could that combinatio­n achieve with real power some day?

The answer has so far been unsatisfyi­ng to both sides, even if some of the blame belongs to Trump, whose daily rants and growing scandals quickly and endlessly overshadow­ed Ryan’s agenda. But instead of staying in the fight, Ryan decided to abandon the speakershi­p before most people thought he had really gotten started in it.

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