The Sentinel-Record

Will GOP accomplish­ments in Congress be enough for voters?

- LISA MASCARO MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — With passage of an enormous budget bill, the GOP-controlled Congress all but wrapped up its legislatin­g for the year. But will it be enough to convince voters to give Republican­s another term at the helm?

In two big ways, Republican­s have done what they promised. They passed a long sought tax overhaul bill that slashed tax rates. They’ve rolled back regulation­s, in ways they claim are boosting the economy. In the Senate, they confirmed a justice to the Supreme Court.

But there are signs Americans wanted more: immigratio­n reforms, gun control legislatio­n, even an infrastruc­ture plan that President Donald Trump promised voters. Tax cuts, for now, will have to do.

“It’s very clear that tax reform was going to be the biggest legislativ­e crown jewel of this Congress,” said Matt Gorman, the spokesman for the House GOP’s campaign arm, the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee. “That is a massive centerpiec­e of our campaign.”

But polls swing wildly these days, strategist­s said. Voters are rarely focused for too long on single issues that can make or break campaigns, as when Republican­s seized control of the House in 2010 amid the economic downturn or Democrats pushed to the majority in 2006 over opposition to the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars and congressio­nal ethics scandals.

Trump’s mixed messages on the GOP’s accomplish­ments only make the campaignin­g more difficult. At the White House on Friday, he toyed with a veto of the $1.3 trillion budget package, complainin­g it lacked his immigratio­n deal and smacked of overspendi­ng, before ultimately signing it. Such shifting views leave Republican­s without a reliable partner as they try to push through political headwinds in what’s expected to be a tough battle for majority control of the House and Senate.

Lawmakers left town for a two-week recess that marks the unofficial end of the legislatin­g season having shelved resolution of other issues.

Congress failed to pass legislatio­n to curb rising health insurance premiums or protect young immigrants known as Dreamers from deportatio­n, two issues that have stirred voters this year. And ahead of the nationwide “March for Our Lives” protests against gun violence, lawmakers took modest steps to boost school safety funds and improve compliance with the federal gun purchase background check system.

Kris Brown, co-president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the measures are “just not enough.”

“The American people have been screaming from the rooftops for real, bold change to fight against” tragedies such as the Florida and Las Vegas shootings, Brown said. “We have seen the consequenc­es of Congress’s inaction.”

Congress’ spring agenda is thin. It includes modest plans to finish a banking bill that rolls back some of the regulation­s put in place after the financial crisis and pass a big farm bill that sets agricultur­e and school nutrition policies. The Senate also has to begin confirmati­on hearings for

Trump’s nominees for secretary of state and CIA director.

The one legislativ­e lift will be another spending bill when the one Trump signed into law expires at the end of September. But it may bring more political risk than reward for Republican­s, since conservati­ves largely sided with the president against this one, and could pose a more serious threat of voter revolt in the fall.

Strategist­s say it will be up to candidates to make the case that GOP’s signature legislativ­e accomplish­ment is worth their re-election.

Democrats have been hammering on the tax law as a giveaway to big business, in part because the steep reduction in corporate rates, from 35 percent to 21 percent, is permanent while the reduced rates for individual­s and other provisions for families, including expanded child tax credits, expire in coming years.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has derided the lopsided benefits for households as “crumbs” — a quip Republican­s eagerly throw back at Democrats.

To prop up public opinion of the GOP’s top accomplish­ment, millions are being spent by outside groups. American Action Network, which is aligned with House Speaker Paul Ryan, is unleashing more than $30 million in ads, and the network backed by the influentia­l Koch brothers will spend more than $20 million, heaping praise on lawmakers who voted for the tax cuts and informing voters about those who didn’t.

And with passage of tax cuts so important to the GOP election effort, Republican­s might take the unusual step of trying to pass them again.

“We think there’s more we can do,” Ryan said.

House GOP leaders are seriously considerin­g legislatio­n this summer — “Tax Cuts 2” — that would try to build on the original bill that became law in December by making the individual tax cuts permanent.

A do-over tax cuts bill is not expected to pass this Congress. But setting up another showdown accomplish­es political goals for Republican­s by turning attention back on the tax law, and pushing Democrats into the uncomforta­ble position of voting against it, again.

Americans for Prosperity, one of the groups in the Koch network, launched an ad campaign urging Congress to fortify the law by making tax cuts permanent. “More needs to be done,” the group says on a website for its advocacy.

“Even if there are things that get passed between now and the fall, the bottom line is the single most important piece of legislatio­n is going to be the tax bill,” said veteran strategist David Winston, who advises House and Senate GOP leadership. “That defines what this Congress is about.”

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