The Denver Post

Congress is in full revolt

- By Jennifer Rubin

Republican congressio­nal leadership in both houses have lost control of frantic members trying desperatel­y to swim away from a burning ship. Consider all of these revolts against party leadership and the White House:

• A cadre of at least 20 House Republican­s have signed the discharge petition to force a vote on the floor to provide a fix for the “dreamers.”

• In the Senate, three Republican­s joined Democrats in voting down the eviscerati­on of net neutrality.

• Also in the Senate, Republican­s joined Democrats in finding that Russia meddled in the 2016 election to help Donald Trump.

• The Washington Post reports, “Republican lawmakers are pushing back against President Trump’s request for Congress to cut $15 billion from programs including children’s health insurance and Ebola disaster relief, saying the vote could make them vulnerable to Democratic attacks in this year’s midterm campaign.” The dispute comes as House leaders face pressure from conservati­ves to take steps on other fronts that could excite the GOP base but create political problems for lawmakers in tough races as the midterm elections loom.

If moderate and mainstream Republican­s can stage a revolt on net neutrality or on behalf of dreamers, why could they not pass bipartisan health-care measures or reject some of Trump’s most egregiousl­y unfit nominees?

A few examples illustrate their missed opportunit­ies:

Sen. Susan Collins, R-maine, promised a vote on health-care fixes; Sen. Bob Corker, R-tenn. could have made the difference on the tax bill, forcing more tax relief be directed toward the non-rich, creating less debt and making the corporate tax reform actually a reform.

If six more Republican­s had joined the 54 senators who voted for a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals fix, it would have made it past a filibuster.

We draw several conclusion­s from all of this.

First, it is hard but not impossible for less extreme members to counteract the radical rightward shift in the GOP. If they had used their numbers earlier in the Trump presidency a frantic scramble might not now be required to create “Well, I tried!” situations to defend themselves in November.

Second, the White House has little to no sway with GOP members; the latter can’t run on the Trump agenda, so they are trying to craft a different one, albeit too late. The harsh, anti-immigrant and frankly anti-populist (e.g., doing away with net neutrality) positions are not ones that can support an electoral majority.

Third, confidence in the tax cuts to save the GOP is at a low point. If a vote for the tax cuts were enough to secure the majority in both houses, you wouldn’t see the batch of desperate tactics now.

Fourth, there is no reason these topics couldn’t be addressed as a matter of regular order in the six months before the midterm elections. Ah, but the House and Senate don’t seem ready to do anything much at all, except for voting on judicial nomination­s, between now and November. That in and of itself shows a remarkable lack of concern for the people’s business.

Finally, if Democrats had the majority and could peel off the Republican­s now in revolt, we might wind up with some effective bipartisan legislatio­n on everything from infrastruc­ture to DACA. Keep that in mind when voting in November.

Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Washington Post, offering reported opinion from a centerrigh­t perspectiv­e.

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