Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

QUOTE OF THE DAY

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Alan Fram, Matthew Daly, Richard Lardner, Andrew Taylor and Erica Werner of The Associated Press and by Lesley Clark of the McClatchy Washington Bureau.

“Press releases don’t solve problems, people do.”

Sen. Joe Manchin,

D-W.Va., on declining to sign a Senate Democratic caucus letter detailing unacceptab­le items in a proposed tax overhaul

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers returning from recess after Labor Day will confront a pile of bills they must approve. They’ll also face another stack of work they’ve promised to tackle.

Worried about the Republican Senate’s ability to deliver on big campaign promises, the White House and its allies are making a strong push to get at least three vulnerable Senate Democrats to back the administra­tion’s tax overhaul agenda.

The shaky Democrats, all up for re-election next year in states that President Donald Trump won handily, have already signaled interest in working across the aisle — even as their Democratic colleagues have urged unity in fighting any GOP tax plan that disproport­ionately helps the rich.

“We are confident right now that we will be able to earn [Democrats’] support with our tax reform agenda,” said Marc Short, the White House director of legislativ­e affairs. Administra­tion officials, he said, have had discussion­s with vulnerable Senate and House Democrats.

Republican­s were particular­ly cheered when Democratic Sens. Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Joe Manchin of West Virginia declined to sign a Senate Democratic caucus letter to Trump and congressio­nal leaders detailing what is not acceptable in a tax plan, notably a tax cut for the top 1 percent of Americans. Every other Democrat and the two independen­t senators who caucus with them signed the letter.

Instead, Manchin said in a statement that he’s “particular­ly excited” to work on the tax code with Trump, who crushed Democratic presidenti­al rival Hillary Clinton in West Virginia, winning 68 percent of the vote.

Trump drew thousands to a rally in Huntington on Thursday night, celebratin­g the decision Thursday by West Virginia’s Democratic governor, Jim Justice, to change party affiliatio­n and become a Republican.

In Washington, Manchin dismissed the Democratic tax letter as a stunt.

“Press releases don’t solve problems, people do,” he said. “Now is not the time to make tax reform harder. Now is the time to get everyone involved and put everything on the table.”

Heitkamp is up for re-election in a state Trump won by 36 percentage points. She declined to sign the letter, saying, “We shouldn’t prejudge any of this.” Donnelly represents Indiana, where Trump won by 19 percentage points.

The pitch to Senate Democrats comes as Republican­s have struggled to reach consensus within their own ranks and give Trump a big legislativ­e victory. A yearslong pledge to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act collapsed in the Senate last month when three Republican­s rejected the GOP leadership’s initiative.

But core principles of the tax overhaul remain unresolved, including whether the effort would raise the budget deficit. Crucial details must be settled, among them how far to lower rates and which tax credits and deductions would be erased. The last time those problems were reconciled and the tax code broadly reshaped was 1986.

Although Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said he’ll try to use a procedural maneuver to allow debate on the tax overhaul to be cut off with 51 votes instead of the traditiona­l 60, Republican­s hold a narrow margin of just 52 seats in the chamber. That means Democrats could cast deciding votes.

The White House has “learned how difficult it is to thread the needle with 52 senators,” Short said.

The administra­tion has already had conversati­ons with more than 200 members of Congress, including members of the House’s Blue Dog Coalition of fiscally conservati­ve Democrats and the Problem Solvers Caucus, a group of Republican­s and Democrats. The administra­tion has also spoken with red state Senate Democrats, Short said.

Two must-do items will dominate Congress’ September agenda: increasing the government’s debt limit to prevent a federal default and passing a temporary spending bill to avert a government shutdown.

Many Republican­s can’t bring themselves to back a debt limit boost. But they run the government, and it’s their responsibi­lity to deliver those votes. Democratic support will be required, and some hope they’ll win concession­s in exchange.

A stopgap measure will be needed because the 12 annual spending bills are behind schedule. There’s no agreement on their overall price tag, which will be in the $1 trillion-plus range.

One wild card is whether Trump will press to fund the U.S.-Mexico border wall he’s pledged. That could spark a confrontat­ion with Democrats.

The Senate aims to approve the annual defense policy bill in September. That’s when Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., expects to return to Washington after starting brain cancer treatment.

He and McConnell wanted to pass the bill last month, but Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., thwarted that plan. Paul wants votes on amendments on indefinite detention and war authorizat­ion.

McCain has warned he’ll use the bill to map a strategy for Afghanista­n if Trump fails to develop a plan.

Elsewhere on Capitol Hill, the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees are investigat­ing whether Russia worked with Trump’s presidenti­al campaign to try to help him win the election. The FBI and Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller are also investigat­ing.

Trump has repeatedly called the issue “fake news” and a “witch hunt.”

Lawmakers from both parties seem determined to press on. Senators introduced bipartisan bills last week creating judicial review proce- dures that could shield Mueller from firing by Trump.

Lawmakers hope to approve a bipartisan bill speeding federal approval of projects to export liquefied natural gas and boosting energy sources and efficiency.

Republican­s also want to roll back the Endangered Species Act, saying it hinders drilling and logging.

And several programs expire Sept. 30, including the Children’s Health Insurance Program, a Democratic favorite.

Also facing expiration are federal flood insurance and programs run by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

Conservati­ves chafe at renewing flood insurance, which is $25 billion in debt. FAA renewal is stuck over a plan to transfer the agency’s air traffic control system to a private nonprofit organizati­on.

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