The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Standing up to president’s worst instincts pays rewards

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

President Trump’s regular threats to close down parts of the government to vindicate an applause line make you almost nostalgic for the shutdowns of the past.

When Sen Ted Cruz, R-Texas, pushed the government to a 16-day halt in 2013 in an effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, at least he was fighting over something that mattered.

I said “almost” about that nostalgia because the closure Cruz championed was, from the beginning, a doomed tactical ploy for a wrongheade­d objective. Josh Holmes, a former aide to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called Cruz’s gambit “a toddler’s version of legislatin­g.”

That Trump’s fixation over a useless border wall looks even more juvenile than a preschoole­r’s tantrum explains why Republican­s, including McConnell, finally said “Enough!” to a president they had been coddling for fear of retaliatio­n and in the pursuit of conservati­ve dominance over the federal judiciary. This time, they told him he had to surrender his wall-funding dreams.

But the Republican­s did not come to this realizatio­n entirely of their own accord. A little over a month ago, the same McConnell said he would not bring budget legislatio­n to the floor that he knew the president would veto. The result was the wrenching 35-day shutdown.

McConnell did not reckon with the impact of Democratic control of the House of Representa­tives. With power in her hands, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, along with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, refused to accommodat­e a presidenti­al objective they knew was phony and, worse, racist in its underlying motivation. This is why Pelosi called the wall “immoral.”

The president’s proclivity to tweet or talk without much reflection was helpful on this front, too. On Sunday, he picked up on a Gallup Poll suggesting, as Trump put it, that “Open Borders will potentiall­y attract 42 million Latin Americans.” He added: “This would be a disaster for the U.S. We need the Wall now!”

So we know it’s “Latin Americans” in general and not just those “criminals” he talks about whom Trump sees as the grave danger. And, by the way, the compromise spending bill shows that Democrats have no interest in “open borders.”

Trump’s lost mojo with Senate Republican­s creates a new playing field. Republican­s can see what a 2020 thumping would look like in the nearly 10-million-vote margin Democrats won in the 2018 House races. They also learned from the price they paid for the last shutdown that they will be blamed for the president’s shenanigan­s.

Noting Trump’s recent statement that “we’re building a lot of wall,” The New York Times calmly reported: “In fact, no new walls have been built or financed by Congress based on the prototypes that the Trump administra­tion unveiled in October 2017.”

But Democrats need to learn lessons from all this, too. First, they should stay tough. Second, they need to be discipline­d.

This episode shows that standing up to Trump’s worst instincts will pay rewards. Democrats forced Senate Republican­s into a very old-fashioned conference committee that reached a budget deal in a very old-fashioned way because the legislator­s were operating in a largely Trump-free zone. This only happened because Democrats resisted calls to play Trump’s game. “Comity” and “civility” are never achieved by capitulati­ng to bullying and hostage-taking.

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