GOP locks horns with Trump as Congress sworn in
HOUSE Republicans were forced to back down on Tuesday on plans to gut a congressional ethics office as Donald Trump rebuked them over the move, in an embarrassing clash with the president-elect on the day the new Congress was sworn in.
When Trump takes office on January 20, Republicans will run both chambers of Congress and theWhite House for the first time since 2007, having retained control of the Senate and House of Representatives in November’s vote.
Emboldened Republican leaders are due to lay out an ambitious conservative agenda that includes cutting taxes, slashing regulations and repealing outgoing President Barack Obama’s health care law.
“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Paul Ryan told lawmakers, after he was easily re-elected as House speaker on Tuesday.
“The people have given us unified government – and it wasn’t because they were feeling generous, it was because they want results,” Ryan said. “How could we live with ourselves if we let them down?”
The shift in presidential power will lift what has been a largeWhite House road block against Republican action in Congress. But as the new era dawned, it was Republicans who drew Trump’s ire for seeking on Monday – without participation by Democrats – to hobble an independent ethics office which has investigated corruption allegations against members of Congress.
The move, severely criticised by Democrats and some Republicans as undermining transparency, was part of a rules package that the House was to vote on Tuesday.
Republicans scrapped the rules change after Trump took to Twitter on Tuesday to publicly rebuke the strategy.
“With all that Congress has to work on, do they really have to make the weakening of the Independent Ethics Watchdog, as unfair as it may be, their number one act and priority,” Trump tweeted.
“Focus on tax reform, healthcare and so many other things of far greater importance!”
Tuesday sawVice President Joe Biden swear in seven new members of the 100seat Senate. Some 52 new members of the 435-seat House of Representatives also took their oath of office.
An early goal of Republicans will be the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act, Obama’s signature domestic achievement that has helped 20 million people gain health insurance.
The issue is stirring debate in Washington. Obama was to visit Capitol Hill yesterday to huddle with Democrats about how to defend his health care law from repeal, while Vice President-elect Mike Pence was to meet with Republican lawmakers on the same day to discuss plans to dismantle Obamacare.
Another early task awaits: Senate confirmation of some 20 cabinet-level appointments nominated by Trump as he fleshes out his administration. Senate hearings are expected to begin in the coming weeks. Some nominees are expected to sail through, notably respected retired General James Mattis, who was picked by Trump to head the Pentagon. But Democrats have pledged to fight several nominations, including Rex Tillerson, the ExxonMobil chief executive who Trump chose for secretary of state; and Betsy DeVos who is Trump’s pick for education secretary.
Beyond Obamacare, Republicans have been chomping at the bit for years to do away with several Obama-era regulations, including environmental and corporate restrictions, and to launch a tax overhaul.
Democrats will likely oppose the most prominent of the proposals, but Democratic minority leader Nancy Pelosi extended an olive branch to Ryan.
“In order to meet the needs of the American people, House Democrats pledge to seek common ground wherever we can,” she said.
But Pelosi stressed that “if there’s an attempt to destroy the guarantee of Medicare, harm Social Security or the Affordable Care Act, Democrats will stand our ground”.