The Signal

McConnell: Immigratio­n debate likely off table

Senate GOP leader has only praise for Trump

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he’s working closely with Democrats to avoid a government shutdown this fall, he’s fine with President Trump’s apparent reversal on meeting North Korea’s dictator, and he has little interest in another Senate debate about immigratio­n reform.

In a wide-ranging interview with USA TODAY, the Kentucky Republican said Trump is handling the negotiatio­ns with North Korea “just right,” and he hopes the summit to discuss denucleari­zation on the Korean Peninsula will go forward.

That was a reversal from Thursday when, after Trump announced he was canceling the June 12 meeting, McConnell said he welcomed the cancellati­on because the North Koreans were “playing with us.”

On Friday, after Trump said the U.S. might go forward with the meeting, McConnell said the North Koreans have “played with us for decades.”

But he said that “I hope the summit occurs, and I think (Trump’s) handling it just right.”

McConnell refused to criticize Trump’s attacks on the FBI and special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible collusion with the Trump campaign. Trump has called that probe a “witch hunt” and leveled misleading attacks on the FBI’s handling of the inquiry.

“I don’t have any observatio­ns to make about” Mueller’s investigat­ion, McConnell told USA TODAY.

Pressed to comment on Trump’s criticisms of the probe, McConnell said: “I decline.”

He said he was focusing all his energy on the Republican agenda.

“We’ve had an extraordin­ary 17 months,” McConnell said, calling it the best period of successes for right-ofcenter Republican­s since he won his first term in the Senate in 1984.

McConnell declined to say whether he was concerned that the Republican Party was now fully tied to a president who takes a protection­ist approach to trade and is enmeshed in allegation­s of extramarit­al affairs with a former porn star, among other things.

“What I’m happy about is the president’s sending us great conservati­ve judges,” McConnell said. He noted that the Senate has confirmed 21 Trumpnomin­ated circuit judges since Trump’s inaugurati­on in January 2017.

He also crowed about the booming economy, the GOP tax-cut law and the slate of Obama-era federal regulation­s Congress has overturned.

Those are things “we had always dreamed of being able (to do) that we’re now able to do because we have someone in the White House who will support the initiative­s we have and make initiative­s that we approve of,” McConnell said.

With the House poised to debate immigratio­n bills next month, McConnell signaled that he had little appetite for another contentiou­s debate on that issue. He said if the House passes legislatio­n that Trump opposes — such as a pending proposal that would grant legal

“I’m not interested in having another experience like I did in February where we had a wide-open immigratio­n debate for a week and were unable to pass anything.”

Mitch McConnell

Senate majority leader

status to the undocument­ed immigrants who came here as children — he will not bring that up for a vote in the Senate.

“I’m not interested in having another experience like I did in February where we had a wide-open immigratio­n debate for a week and were unable to pass anything,” McConnell said.

At that time, four competing immigratio­n bills all came up short of the 60 votes needed for most legislatio­n in the Senate, including a Trump-backed measure that got just 39 votes.

“If, on the other hand, the House were to pass a bill the president was supportive of and there was the potential of actually making a law — rather than just engaging in a wheel-spinning exercise — I would take a good hard look at it,” McConnell said.

The GOP leader sounded optimistic about the 2018 midterm elections. He noted that Republican­s are on offense in at least six races, with Democratic incumbents running for re-election in states Trump won by significan­t margins in 2016.

He singled out the Florida Senate contest as one where the GOP challenger, Gov. Rick Scott, was raising gobs of money and positionin­g himself to oust incumbent Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson.

“In Florida, of course, we have a voracious fundraiser as our candidate there,” McConnell said. “I think Gov. Scott raised $3 million in the first three weeks. I would love to clone him and put him everywhere.”

He also said he expected Republican­s to be “very competitiv­e in West Virginia,” even though Don Blankenshi­p, a GOP candidate who lost the primary and has attacked McConnell, has vowed to launch a third-party bid.

“West Virginia is arguably the strongest Trump state,” McConnell said. “The president is very interested in putting West Virginia in the Republican column.”

Asked if he was going to challenge Blankenshi­p’s third-party candidacy, McConnell laughed and did not answer. West Virginia has a “sore loser” law to prevent failed primary candidates from running in the general election.

McConnell dismissed questions about whether another star GOP recruit, Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley, was living up to expectatio­ns. Hawley has been criticized by some Republican­s for lackluster fundraisin­g and minimal campaignin­g, while his opponent, Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, has amassed a huge campaign war chest.

Even as he trumpeted the GOP’s prospects of increasing its Senate majority, McConnell said he has developed a great working relationsh­ip with the Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer of New York.

McConnell said that rapport is one reason he’s confident Congress will pass the necessary spending bills this fall to keep the government funded and open.

“We’re not going to be shutting the government down,” he said.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Sen. Mitch McConnell has given his support for President Trump’s negotiatio­ns with North Korea, even as Trump changes his stance.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Sen. Mitch McConnell has given his support for President Trump’s negotiatio­ns with North Korea, even as Trump changes his stance.

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