The Commercial Appeal

Trump can re-boot presidency by pushing for religious liberty

- COLUMNIST MICHAEL GERSON

WASHINGTON — The central promise of the Trump administra­tion — the repeal and replacemen­t of Obamacare — has failed. The central premise of the Trump administra­tion — that Donald Trump is a brilliant negotiator — has been discredite­d. In the process of losing a legislativ­e battle, Trump has lost the theory of his presidency.

It was a profoundly personal rejection. Trump’s ignorance of policy details alienated legislator­s. His ill-timed threats backfired. His bonhomie fell flat.

The lessons, however, run deeper. Like other politician­s before him, Trump ran for office arguing, in essence: Just give my party control of the elected branches of the federal government and massive change will quickly follow. Many Americans believed in this promise of winner-takeall government.

The American system of government — with its constipate­d Senate rules and its complicate­d House coalitions — is designed to frustrate such plans. But the closeness of recent national elections has encouraged partisan dreams of political dominance. Republican­s had control of the House, Senate and presidency in the 108th Congress.

Democrats had the same in the 111th Congress. Now Republican­s have it all in the 115th Congress.

Total control is intoxicati­ng. The winners feel like they have a mandate, even a mission. But the losers know, if they maintain partisan discipline and prevent achievemen­ts of the other side, they have a realistic chance of winning it all back. This leads to a cycle of hubris and obstructio­nism.

How can this cycle be broken? There is only one way. Someone must do genuine outreach, involving the credible promise of compromise, from a position of strength. It is the winners who must act first, taking the risk of offering a hand that may be slapped away. Then it is the political losers who have the responsibi­lity to reward good faith.

Obamacare — passed in a partisan quick march and viewed by some Republican­s as the focus of evil in the modern world — may not be the most promising ground for agreement. The same may be true for tax reform, which involves a thousand well-funded special interests. But genuine negotiatio­n might be possible on an infrastruc­ture bill. The same might be true on legislatio­n designed to increase the skills — and deal with the dislocatio­n — of 38 percent of American workers whose jobs are threatened by automation. And at least one culture-war issue belongs on the list: religious liberty.

Many religious conservati­ves imagined they would, at this point, be in a defensive crouch. The Obama administra­tion had required the Little Sisters of the Poor to provide insurance coverage for sterilizat­ions and the emergency contracept­ive Plan B.

Instead, unexpected­ly, religious conservati­ves find themselves in a position of relative strength, as one of the contributo­rs to Trump’s victory. They could use their influence to encourage genuine pluralism, with benefits that are shared and nonsectari­an.

What would the elements of a legislativ­e compromise look like? It would need to allow institutio­ns motivated by a religious mission to maintain their identity. Religious liberty involves, not just the freedom of individual belief but the freedom to create institutio­ns that reflect a shared belief.

But any realistic agreement would also need to include broad anti-discrimina­tion protection­s in employment and services — including for gay people — outside of the strong carveout for religious nonprofits.

It could be powerful for religious conservati­ves to attempt outreach from a position of political strength, and Donald Trump, oddly, may be the leader to get this kind of deal. He broke ground among Republican­s in recognizin­g LGBT rights in his convention speech. But he is also close to religious conservati­ve leaders.

And just about now, Trump needs a way to reconstitu­te the meaning of his presidency.

Michael Gerson’s email address is michaelger­son@washpost.com.

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JEFF DANZIGER/WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP
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