The Mercury News Weekend

Trump gets schooled on building walls — in D.C.

- By E. J. Dionne Jr. E. J. Dionne is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » There is a reason bipartisan government is so hard these days. It’s because what were once widely seen as moderate, commonsens­e solutions are pushed off the table by a far right that defines compromise as acquiescen­ce to its agenda.

President Trump made this clear during his meeting with congressio­nal leaders on Tuesday. At one point, he stumbled into a sensible and compassion­ate approach to the plight of “Dreamers” — immigrants brought here illegally by their parents when they were children.

He was prompted when Sen. Dianne Feinstein asked if he would support a “clean DACA bill” — legislatio­n maintainin­g President Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program without funding a border wall or making any other concession­s to immigratio­n hard liners.

Trump, who had set DACA to expire this March, was ready to roll. “Yeah, I would like to do it,” he said. And hewent farther, expressing a desire for “comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform” that would legalize the status of the nation’s 11 million undocument­ed immigrants.

The newly gracious Trump was pummeled by parts of his right-wing base. At 7:16 p.m. on Tuesday, the president retreated on Twitter: “As I made very clear today our country needs the security of the Wall on the Southern Border, which must be part of any DACA approval.” Of course, if he had been “very clear,” he wouldn’t have needed to send that tweet.

Most of Trump’s critics played his performanc­e as a sign of his ignorance about the issues. It was also an example of his habit in faceto-face meetings of agreeing with nearly everything everyone says.

There’s a lot to this, but the larger lesson is more important: Progress in many areas where the parties could work together is blocked by the need for Trump and the Republican Party to kowtow to conservati­ve ultras.

In his unguarded moment, Trump simply reflected the belief of the vast majority of Americans that it is ridiculous and cruel to deport the Dreamers.

Trump has acknowledg­ed this before. It was ironic that hours after Trump’s triple axel on the question, Judge William Alsup halted the president’s original effort to end DACA by citing Trump’s own words to make the case against him.

“Does anybody really want to throw out good, educated and accomplish­ed young people who have jobs, some serving in the military?” Trump had said last September. Well, the other Trump seemed to want to do just that.

Trump is also stuck with his promise to build the border wall despite the fact that a USA Today survey of Congress last fall found that fewer than 25 percent of Republican­s were willing to endorse the plan.

The cost of extremism is obvious on other matters as well. The Children’s Health Insurance Program is a genuinely bipartisan achievemen­t that, at lowcost, gets health care to 9 million young Americans. But the renewal is hung up because House Republican­s are demanding that it be paid for by cutting Obamacare spending on various preventive measures. Really? Since when is prevention a partisan issue?

There are arguments between the left and the right worth having. But as Trump made clear, there are many problems we could solve if ideologica­l posturing did not lay such a heavy hand on our politics. We might even find ways to love each other, at least a little bit.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? During a meeting on immigratio­n policy with lawmakers on Tuesday, President Trump echoed the belief of most Americans: that it is cruel to deport the “Dreamers.” He was quickly pummeled into retreat by parts of his right-wing base.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS During a meeting on immigratio­n policy with lawmakers on Tuesday, President Trump echoed the belief of most Americans: that it is cruel to deport the “Dreamers.” He was quickly pummeled into retreat by parts of his right-wing base.

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