The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump, Pelosi spark a new power relationsh­ip in Washington

- By Lisa Mascaro, Jonathan Lemire and Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON >> They haven’t spoken in days, not since President Donald Trump called to congratula­te Nancy Pelosi on Democrats’ election night win.

But they don’t really need to. Trump and Pelosi go way back, from the time she first showed up at Trump Tower fundraisin­g for the Democrats long before he would become president or she the House speaker. Two big-name heirs to bigcity honchos — Trump and Pelosi each had fathers who were political power players in their home towns — they’ve rubbed elbows on the Manhattan social scene for years.

And despite daily barbs in Washington, he’s always “Mr. President” to her, and she’s one prominent politician he has not labeled with a derisive nickname.

Not quite friends, nor enemies, theirs is now perhaps the most important relationsh­ip in Washington. If anything is to come of the new era of divided government, with a Republican president and Democratic control of the House, it will happen in the deal-making space between two of the country’s most polarizing politician­s.

The day after their election night phone call, Trump and Pelosi did speak again, indirectly, across Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

“I really respected what Nancy said last night about bipartisan­ship and getting together and uniting,” Trump said in a press conference at the White House. “That’s what we should be doing.”

Pressed after his unusual public lobbying for Pelosi to become House speaker, Trump insisted he was sincere.

“A lot of people thought I was being sarcastic or I was kidding. I wasn’t. I think she deserves it,” he said. “I also believe that Nancy Pelosi and I could work together and get a lot of things done.”

Pelosi sent word back a few minutes later from her own press conference at the Capitol, which she delayed for nearly an hour as the president conducted his.

“Last night, I had a conversati­on with President Trump about how we could work together,” Pelosi said, noting that “building infrastruc­ture” was one of the items they discussed.

“He talked about it during his campaign and really didn’t come through with it in his first two years in office,” she nudged. “I hope that we can do that because we want to create jobs from sea to shining sea.”

Despite all the campaign trail trash talk, both Trump and Pelosi have incentive to make some deals.

The president could use a domestic policy win heading into his own re-election in 2020, alongside his regular railing against illegal immigratio­n, the “witch hunt” of the Russia investigat­ion or other issues that emerge from his tweets.

Democrats, too, need to show Americans they can do more than resist the Trump White House. It’s no surprise that two of the top Democratic priorities in the new Congress, infrastruc­ture investment and lowering health care costs, dovetail with promises Trump made to voters, but has not yet fulfilled.

“I do think there’s opportunit­ies to pass legislatio­n,” said former White House legislativ­e director Marc Short.

Trump has long viewed Pelosi as both a foil and a possible partner, and she sees in him the one who can sign legislatio­n into law.

The president has told confidants that he respects Pelosi’s deal-making prowess and her ability to hang on to power in the face of a series of challenges from the left wing of the party, according to four White House officials and Republican­s close to the White House.

The officials were not authorized to publicly discuss private conversati­ons and requested anonymity.

He told one ally this month that he respected Pelosi “as a fighter” and that he viewed her as someone with whom he could negotiate.

“The president respects her,” said Short.

Short described the interactio­n between Pelosi and Trump during a 2017 meeting with other congressio­nal leaders at the White House to prevent a government shutdown. “They were throwing pros and cons back at each other,” he said.

“The question I can’t answer is to what extent will Democrats give Pelosi political bandwidth” to strike deals, Short said. He pointed to potential areas of agreement like infrastruc­ture, drug prices and prison reform.

But part of Trump’s push for Pelosi to return to power was more nakedly political. Pelosi has long been a popular Republican target, spurring countless fundraisin­g efforts and attack ads. And Trump has told advisers that, if needed, he would make her the face of the opposition in Democratic party until the 2020 presidenti­al field sorts itself out.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and President Donald Trump haven’t talked in days.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and President Donald Trump haven’t talked in days.

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