Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Las Vegas Valley has seen some strange weather so far in 2019 Trump-dem talks collapse

President blames Pelosi remark for end of infrastruc­ture meeting

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON —

Planned talks between President Donald Trump and Democratic leaders on bipartisan infrastruc­ture legislatio­n fell apart Wednesday, with Trump instead holding a news conference in the Rose Garden where he warned that there was only one track forward: either “investigat­ion” or “investment.”

Trump told reporters that he was enraged that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had said that he had “engaged in a cover-up” ahead of the meeting. Supporters framed the remark as provocativ­e, and Trump told reporters it prompted him to cut off

talks, though he really wanted to put together a strong infrastruc­ture package.

Pelosi’s comment earlier Wednesday referred to Trump’s stonewalli­ng of multiple congressio­nal investigat­ions by ignoring subpoenas, refusing to allow current and former advisers to testify and not handing over documents.

In the past month, Pelosi had been trying to hold back Democrats eager to start impeachmen­t proceeding­s. Aware of the political risks in 2020, Pelosi has warned, “Trump is goading us to impeach him.”

A recent Reuters/ipsos poll found that more than half of Americans believe multiple congressio­nal investigat­ions of the president interfere with important government business, while 45 percent said Trump should be impeached.

Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer returned to Capitol Hill after a brief meeting with the president and said they remain interested in working out a bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal. “Unfortunat­ely,” Pelosi said, “the president isn’t ready.”

Trump denied that, telling reporters that he was ready to talk infrastruc­ture: “That’s one of the easy ones. And instead of walking in happily into a meeting, I walk in to look at people that had just said that I was doing a cover-up. I don’t do cover-ups. You people know that probably better than anybody.”

But Tuesday night, Trump sent the two Democratic leaders a letter telling them that they should pass his trade deal with Mexico and Canada before turning to infrastruc­ture.

‘Big and bold deal’

Wednesday’s confrontat­ion was a dramatic departure from a meeting last month, when Pelosi and Schumer emerged from a White House meeting with Trump with the news that all sides had agreed to a “big and bold deal,” as Schumer put it.

Schumer noted that Trump had agreed “to present his ideas” on how to pay for the infrastruc­ture initiative, as only funding with Trump’s support could make it through the Republican-controlled Senate.

It seemed like a tall order, and it was. Last year, Democrats released a proposal to spend $1 trillion on infrastruc­ture projects over 10 years. The White House proposed a decadelong $1.5 trillion package of public-private spending that would have been fueled with $200 billion in federal seed money. Neither package went anywhere.

Back on Capitol Hill after Trump’s Rose Garden remarks, Schumer asserted, “it was planned” that Trump would cut short the meeting and invite the White House press corps to the Rose Garden as a ploy to avoid presenting a plan to find the revenue for the 10-year package.

“Hello,” Schumer said. “There were investigat­ions going on three weeks ago when we met, and he still met with us. But now that he was forced to say how he’d actually pay for it, he had to run away.”

In the afternoon, Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev., opened a hearing for the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture subcommitt­ee, which she chairs, by faulting Trump for saying “that he won’t work with Congress on any legislatio­n — even if it benefits this country — unless Congress ignores its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to carry out oversight of the administra­tion. “If the president wants to hold good-paying jobs hostage, that’s his choice, but it certainly isn’t mine. And I don’t believe it is of this committee,” Titus added. “It is beneath the dignity of the office for the president to suggest that he’ll allow bridges to collapse, airports to overcrowd and ports to deteriorat­e unless we end our investigat­ions.”

Trump strategy

“I think he’s being strategic. I think he’s needling them,” observed Saikrishna Prakash of the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.

“Because once they impeach him, it’s over” because the GOP Senate is unlikely to reach the two-thirds needed to convict and remove Trump from office.

Meanwhile, Prakash sees Democrats who have said Trump is guilty of obstructio­n tangled in their own rhetoric: “If it’s true, they should have already begun impeachmen­t proceeding­s.”

Center for American Progress fellow Max Bergmann, who favors impeachmen­t, thought likewise. He believes Trump is thinking, “Democrats aren’t prosecutin­g the case against me, so the way I can demonstrat­e my innocence, the way I’ll throw it in their face,” is by arguing “that the fact that they’re not prosecutin­g me as a sign of my innocence.”

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or at 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

 ?? University Medical Center ?? University Medical Center staff hold a “donor walk” Wednesday for crash victim Michael Sigler. The donor walk was the first to be held at the hospital to honor someone whose organs are being donated, Sigler’s 43-year-old mother said.
University Medical Center University Medical Center staff hold a “donor walk” Wednesday for crash victim Michael Sigler. The donor walk was the first to be held at the hospital to honor someone whose organs are being donated, Sigler’s 43-year-old mother said.
 ?? Evan Vucci The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump holds a news conference Wednesday in the Rose Garden of the White House.
Evan Vucci The Associated Press President Donald Trump holds a news conference Wednesday in the Rose Garden of the White House.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States