The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

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- Dana Milbank Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

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Donald Trump’s America has taken on a Dickensian pall. The Trump administra­tion floats a plan for tent cities -- modernday Hoovervill­es to shelter the growing number of migrant children it is detaining.

A Honduran man fleeing violence kills himself in a Texas jail after U.S. authoritie­s take his child from him -- part of a Trump policy of separating illegal immigrants at the border from their children.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s force a high school senior in Iowa to return to Mexico -- the country he left when he was 3 -- where he is soon killed, his throat slit.

And in Congress, House Republican leaders fend off a “discharge petition” by Democrats and the meager group of GOP moderates attempting to force a vote on the Dream Act protecting children like the murdered teen.

Whatever the motives behind such policies, they have the appearance of abject cruelty -- not a good look for Republican­s as they go into midterm elections. Cue the compassion! Thirteen House Republican­s, party leaders and a few backbenche­rs in competitiv­e races ambled before the cameras Wednesday morning after their weekly caucus, but instead of taking the usual partisan shots and performing the usual genuflecti­ons to the president, they spoke of their tender concern for the addicted.

Most held 8-by-10 photos of constituen­ts recovering from or killed by opioid abuse, and they touted some 57 bills designed to ease the epidemic. The over-the-top, 20-minute show of heart resembled a telethon.

“It’s for the people in these photos that we rallied around bipartisan legislatio­n,” announced Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., holding a photo of “Amanda.”

The likely next speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who invariably comes up with the wrong word, did not disappoint, promising to “deal with every ability of this addiction.”

Outgoing speaker Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., with exaggerate­d emotion, spoke of “America at its strongest, people coming together to help each other through these difficult times.” Puh-leeze. There’s nothing wrong with their proposals, per se. Most have broad bipartisan support and will do some good. But they are scattersho­t and incrementa­l -- more campaign material than substance.

Public-health experts have pushed for a comprehens­ive approach to the crisis modeled after the Ryan White HIV/AIDS program. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, D-Md., have introduced such a plan, which would cost $100 billion over a decade. House Democrats are pushing for a $5-billion-ayear opioid response fund. But Republican­s aren’t about to let those become law.

And though Congress has approved $6 billion over two years in new opioid-addiction funding, this comes as President Trump has tried to scale back the two major programs that provide much of America’s addiction treatment, Obamacare and Medicaid. (Trump’s nearly $1.5 trillion proposed cut is, by coincidenc­e, the same as the cost of his tax cut.) The latest assault on Obamacare -- the Justice Department’s refusal to defend current law against lawsuits from GOP-led states -- could leave many more without insurance and addiction treatment.

Meanwhile, the news is full of ugly accounts about the consequenc­es of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown, including reports about the tent cities for unaccompan­ied minors (McClatchy News), the “dreamer” killed after his forced return to Mexico (Des Moines Register) and the suicide of the Honduran father (The Washington Post’s Nick Miroff). Vulnerable Republican­s, seeking shelter from the gruesome consequenc­es of the administra­tion’s actions, tried to force a vote on the Dream Act -- but conservati­ves prevailed. The House will instead take up alternativ­es next week that are unlikely to pass.

Ryan explained to reporters Wednesday why the Dream Act, which would prevail if given a vote, isn’t going to get one: “Last thing I want to do is bring a bill out of here that I know the president won’t support.”

This is why the show of compassion rings hollow: Republican lawmakers aren’t willing to stand up to the source of their Dickensian dilemma. Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., spoke out against Trump -- and lost his primary Tuesday. Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala., once expressed concern about Trump -and was forced into a runoff. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who is retiring, complains his GOP colleagues won’t defend their own trade principles because they don’t want to “poke the bear.”

Republican­s may be afraid voters will see them as heartless -but they are more afraid of crossing Trump.

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