USA TODAY US Edition

To Koch donors, Trump is best hope for change

Contributo­rs open pocketbook­s, even amid uncertaint­y

- Fredreka Schouten @fschouten USA TODAY

“God gave us one more chance by allowing him to be in office.” Al Hartman

To Al Hartman, President Trump is a heaven-sent leader, expertly carrying out a conservati­ve agenda to roll back regulation­s and limit the size and scope of government.

“He’s working right out of the Heritage playbook,” said Hartman, a Houston real-estate executive, referring to the conservati­ve Washington think tank. “God gave us one more chance by allowing him to be in office.”

To Liz Wright of Denver, Trump is an imperfect vehicle for implementi­ng the small-government policies she seeks. “He doesn’t have a consistent governing philosophy,” said Wright, who voted for Libertaria­n presidenti­al contender Gary Johnson last November.

Yet Wright and Hartman, both donors to the conservati­ve policy and political network tied to billionair­e industrial­ist Charles Koch, view Trump’s presidency and the Republican majority in the Congress as their best hope of passing an overhaul of the tax code, repealing the Affordable Care Act and enacting other priorities dear to the network’s wealthy conservati­ves.

“We have maybe 10 months, a rare opportunit­y in at least a decade, to shrink the influence of the government in the economy,” said Wright’s husband, Chris. But with a president who seems unable to deliver a “clear, consistent from the top” message and a slender 52-48 majority in the Senate, “we are threading the needle” on seeing that goal achieved, he said.

As Wright and some 400 Koch- aligned donors wrapped up a three-day seminar, the network pledged to spend unpreceden­ted amounts to advance their policy and political agenda.

The network leaders are lobbying hard to bury a proposal pushed by House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., that would impose a border tax on imports, which Koch says would result on higher prices on consumer goods.

North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows, chairman of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus and one of 18 elected officials who attended the private Koch conclave, said the debate within the GOP over the border tax is jeopardizi­ng efforts to pass a tax overhaul this year.

Network officials also are withholdin­g support for the health care bill slated for a Senate vote this week, saying it stops short of the goal of doing away with the Affordable Care Act.

Doug Deason, a top Republican donor from Dallas, said he and about “eight or 10” other political contributo­rs have opted to ignore contributi­on requests from Senate Republican­s, including Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., until the chamber moves to pass a tax overhaul and fully repeal the Affordable Care Act.

He did concede that even if Senate Republican­s failed to achieve those objectives, he would open his checkbook again.

Deason generally praised Trump’s moves, most effusively for the nomination of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.

Any accomplish­ment beyond the Gorsuch confirmati­on “is gravy,” he said. Trump “can go play golf for the rest of his term.”

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