The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Senators rally behind Trump and his agenda

- By Erica Werner and Alan Fram

WASHINGTON » There was no dam break of Republican rancor against Donald Trump on Wednesday, a day after a pair of the party’s prominent senators denounced their president and invited colleagues to join them. Instead, most GOP lawmakers rallied around Trump and his agenda, with one all but saying “good riddance” to Jeff Flake of Arizona and Bob Corker of Tennessee.

“Maybe we do better by having some of the people who just don’t like him leave, and replace them with somebody else,” Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma told The Associated Press. “And I think that’s what’s happening.”

Trump heartily agreed, declaring that both men were retiring because they couldn’t win reelection, and “I think I’m probably helped greatly in Arizona by what happened with Sen. Flake.”

Inhofe went further than most GOP lawmakers, but he had plenty of company in his refusal to echo the criticisms of Flake and Corker. Trump himself proclaimed he was leading a party unified in its pursuit of tax cut legislatio­n.

“There is great unity in the Republican Party,” he contended as he left the White House for a hurricane briefing and other events in Texas. Claiming a show of affection at his appearance at a Senate GOP lunch a day earlier, Trump said: “I called it a lovefest. It was almost a lovefest. Maybe it was a lovefest.” He’s said repeatedly that he got multiple standing ovations.

But if the lunch — no outsiders allowed — displayed unity of sorts, the events that preceded and followed it did the opposite. First Corker and then Flake blistered Trump with criticism, accusing him of leading the nation into a moral black hole. Both lawmakers do plan to retire at the end of next year, a semi-bombshell Flake dropped Tuesday, freeing them to speak without fear.

Flake kept it up Wednesday with an opinion piece in The Washington Post. He likened the current moment to the red scare era of the early 1950s when Sen. Joseph McCarthy threw accusation­s of communism at a wide range of people. McCarthy’s career ended in disgrace, his downfall hastened when an Army lawyer, Joseph Welch, confronted him at a hearing with the question: “Have you no sense of decency, Sir, at long last?”

“We face just such a time now. We have again forgotten who we are supposed to be,” Flake wrote. “There is a sickness in our system — and it is contagious.”

“Nine months of this administra­tion is enough for us to stop pretending that this is somehow normal, and that we are on the verge of some sort of pivot to governing, to stability. Nine months is more than enough for us to say, loudly and clearly: Enough.”

Flake has contended in interviews that the Republican Party is at a tipping point, or close to one, and others will start to speak out, too.

There was scant evidence of that Wednesday on Capitol Hill, aside from the few Republican­s in the House and Senate who have already made public their grievances with Trump. Nearly everyone else dodged questions on the topic, voiced unqualifie­d support for Trump, or answered by saying that distractio­ns aside, the GOP must remain focused on passing landmark legislatio­n to simplify and reduce taxes.

After a drought of legislativ­e accomplish­ments so far this year, a tax bill would give Republican­s a major victory and a powerful argument for retaining their majorities in next year’s midterm elections, something the lawmakers desperatel­y want.

“You know my answer. I’m focused on getting stuff done,” said Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, when asked about his colleagues’ criticisms of Trump. “He was elected. I disagree with him fairly frequently, and I do so publicly and privately. But I want to work with him to get stuff done.”

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 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, returns to his office after a closed-door security briefing at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, returns to his office after a closed-door security briefing at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday.

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