The Denver Post

Impeachmen­t dominates, but much other work awaits Congress

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTO N» Impeachmen­t may have leapfrogge­d to the top of the national agenda, but members of Congress still have their day jobs as legislator­s, and they’re returning to Washington this coming week with mixed hopes of success.

It’s a volatile, difficult-topredict time in Washington as lawmakers end a twoweek break. The notion that President Donald Trump could do much significan­t dealmaking with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, his impeachmen­t antagonist, could be fanciful, given Trump’s impulsiven­ess and demands for border wall money.

An important trade agreement pact has a pulse. An effort to deal with high prescripti­on drug prices seems stuck.

Pelosi, D-Calif., is aware of the political imperative to avoid looking tied up in impeachmen­t while leaving the rest of the nation’s business hanging. At a recent news conference she solicited questions on topics such as trade before turning to impeachmen­t, reminding that the Democratic-controlled House has sent bill after bill to the GOP-led Senate, which has done little else but vote on presidenti­al nomination­s for months.

Divided government has produced scant results thus far, except for a small-scale budget deal that lawmakers are struggling to put in place. The next few months could prove make or break for high-profile agenda items such as an updated trade agreement with Canada and Mexico, a full slate of spending bills and prescripti­on drug legislatio­n. Pelosi insists impeachmen­t doesn’t have to harm the legislativ­e agenda in Washington.

“They have nothing to do with each other,” Pelosi said earlier this month. “We have a responsibi­lity to uphold our oath of office, to support and defend the Constituti­on of the United States. We also have a responsibi­lity to get the job done for the American people.”

The atmosphere isn’t exactly brimming with optimism. Hopes for a nearterm breakthrou­gh on trade, one of the few items on which Pelosi and Republican­s are in general alignment, faded after AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka issued a combative warning against a speedy vote on the new North American pact.

On spending, negotiator­s are trying push through a $1.4 trillion package of agency spending bills to fill in the details of this summer’s budget-and-debt accord.

Experience­d bargainers such as GOP Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, chairman of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, are taking the lead on that but lingering bitterness over the U.S.-Mexico wall fight threatens to again delay a resolution. That’s particular­ly so after Trump’s attacked lawmakers’ traditiona­l power of the purse by raiding military constructi­on projects to finance wall constructi­on.

Given the uncertaint­y, lawmakers may end up doing what they do often: Kicking the can down the road.

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