The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Infighting ominous sign for Trump, conservati­ve agenda

- Andrew Malcolm

The political disaster that was the non-repeal of Obamacare last month was bad enough. But now its recriminat­ory aftershock­s, fully joined by President Donald Trump himself, augur ill for the future of the Republican agenda this year — and maybe beyond.

The president was understand­ably frustrated in his first major legislativ­e campaign. He worked the phones late most nights to round up GOP votes to pass the imperfect, long-promised repeal out of the House of Representa­tives.

He had nearly a score of individual White House meetings and social occasions with House members, mainly the recalcitra­nt rogues of the so-called Freedom Caucus. Trump even made an unusual presidenti­al trip to Capitol Hill just to lobby.

In each meeting, the Freedom Caucus had a new objection. Trump sought a solution. Then another objection. And another.

In the end, Speaker Paul Ryan, facing certain defeat not at the hands of an impotent Democratic minority but because of GOP teammates, pulled the bill.

Trump will get his Supreme Court nominee confirmed shortly, a major win. But the repeal retreat was a vivid lesson in how little control any GOP leaders maintain over the energies and directions of the party rank and file. Trump benefited from that lack of cohesion last year to snatch the nomination, but now it works against him.

The rejected party leader resorted to Twitter to slam the 30 or so Freedom Caucus members who stood against the bill’s passage, professing allegiance to conservati­ve principles.

Trump tweeted: “The Freedom Caucus will hurt the entire Republican agenda if they don’t get on the team, & fast. We must fight them, & Dems, in 2018!”

That makes for fighting words. And emboldened caucus members responded in kind:

“It didn’t take long for the swamp to drain realDonald­Trump,” said Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, suggesting Trump had already been co-opted by the D.C. elite he had so ardently campaigned against.

Conservati­ve activist Pamela Geller analyzed it this way at American Thinker: “Politics is a twisted world, in which power and re-election are the currency in which they trade. The bottom line in business is money, and while money talks for politician­s also, the bottom line with these corrupt clowns is not always so easy to discern.”

The party dysfunctio­n and disunity come at a bad time. First, they ruin any sense of momentum surroundin­g a new chief executive and hearten leaderless Democrats.

As the party that finally got what it sought — control of the legislativ­e and executive branches — the GOP already looks ineffectiv­e by its own hand. Coming this month are likely intraparty fights over spending priorities. A government shutdown looms April 28. Tax reform could be handicappe­d too. Savings from Obamacare changes, now lost, were to have financed much of it.

Trump may produce another sharp political pivot. We’ve seen that before. And the reality is he’d have a tough time mounting primary challenges to Freedom Caucus rebels. Most of them come from conservati­ve districts; many won by larger margins there than Trump.

And although his rally crowds remain large and enthusiast­ic, the president’s unusually low job approval rating — now in the mid-30s — provides no leverage.

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