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Ryan’s leadership fell short

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Paul Ryan was always the thoughtful, likable young conservati­ve. Now he’s just another Republican House speaker who couldn’t figure out how to do his job — or decided it was too hard.

“I have given this job everything I have,” Ryan said in announcing Wednesday that he would not run for re-election this fall. It wasn’t enough.

There’s no denying Ryan faced tough circumstan­ces. His predecesso­r, John Boehner, walked away in the middle of his term after failing to corral a party deeply divided between its suburban moderates and increasing­ly forceful conservati­ves.

Neither Boehner nor Ryan was ever able to get those conservati­ves to accept that compromise is essential to governing.

While Boehner faced a president of the opposing party, Ryan had the complicati­on of President Trump, who reshaped the Republican Party in ways that contradict the speaker’s long-held principles on trade and other issues. Trump is now synonymous with the GOP, in part because if Ryan resisted the transforma­tion, it was hard to tell.

It didn’t have to be that way. There was a time when Ryan himself, now 48, was considered to be next-generation presidenti­al timber. “Paul Ryan is a leader. His leadership begins with character and values,” 2012 GOP presidenti­al nominee Mitt Romney said when he picked Ryan as his running mate. “With energy and vision, Paul Ryan has become an intellectu­al leader of the Republican Party.”

The sky was the limit. But the sky has fallen, at least for now.

Ryan abandons his party at an inopportun­e time. Respect for the character, values and intellectu­al leadership that Romney heralded as Ryan’s selling points are at an all-time low among many Republican­s. That’s much to the detriment of both the congressma­n and his party’s future viability.

He is now a lame duck not only as speaker but also as a fundraiser for a GOP on the ropes. He knows that Republican­s desperatel­y need cash to offset Democrats’ ferocious desire to vote them out in November.

Maybe it wasn’t fair to expect a selfstyled budget wonk to stand up to the reality TV-honed charisma of America’s first social media president. Neverthele­ss, America needed Ryan to rise to the moment, to lead his party and his country in defense of principles challenged by a plutocrati­c populist devoid of respect for the rule of law, basic facts and competent government.

America needed a leader who championed special counsel Robert Mueller, not just with words but also with legislatio­n to protect his search for the truth on Trump and Russia. A leader who went against some in his party to allow votes on bipartisan health care and immigratio­n deals. Above all, a leader who used his position to be the upstanding conservati­ve counterwei­ght to Trump.

Now Ryan is going home so he can be more than a weekend dad. He says he has accomplish­ed much of what he had hoped to do in Washington. If that includes a legacy of massive deficits, a paralyzed Congress and a party now fully identified with an erratic, ill-informed, ethically challenged president, he’s right.

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EVAN VUCCI/AP

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