Las Vegas Review-Journal

Three-day party Punk Rock Bowling returns to downtown Vegas Trump-pelosi rift deepens

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accused President Donald Trump of using temper tantrums to goad Democrats into impeachmen­t hearings and suggested Thursday that his family stage an interventi­on because he’s incapable of doing his job.

“I wish that his family or his staff would have an interventi­on for the good of the country,” Pelosi, D-calif., told a Capitol news conference.

Trump, in turn, called Pelosi “Crazy Nancy.”

“I think she’s got a lot of problems,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

As for himself, he declared, “I’m an extremely stable genius.”

The back-and-forth began a day after Trump walked out of an infrastruc­ture meeting at the White House and held a Rose Garden news conference to declare he no longer would work with Democrats until their oversight investigat­ions of him and his administra­tion ended.

Pelosi called it a stunt and part of Trump’s plan to push House Democrats onto the path of impeachmen­t, a road she said she would not take without

bipartisan support for such a politicall­y divisive measure.

The speaker and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., had planned to meet with Trump at the White House on Wednesday to discuss an infrastruc­ture bill, politicall­y benign legislatio­n that Democrats and Republican­s want to deliver with funding for local projects.

Instead, the meeting devolved into a tit-for-tat.

Trump walks out

Trump left the White House meeting and went to the Rose Garden and delivered a blistering account of Democratic motives behind investigat­ions into election meddling by Russia and alleged ties to Trump’s 2016 campaign, with probes into his taxes and business dealings.

The president declared he would not cooperate with Democrats on bipartisan legislatio­n until they drop the investigat­ions.

“The president has a bag of tricks,” Pelosi said. “He’s a master of distractio­n.”

Federal courts recently have ruled that tax and financial documents under subpoena by the House must be released to lawmakers.

“What really got to him was these court cases and (that) the House Democratic Caucus has not passed impeachmen­t, and that’s where he wants us to be,” Pelosi said.

Trump denied he wanted the House to formally charge him.

“I don’t think anybody wants to be impeached,” he said.

Pelosi’s restraint could be tested in a divided caucus where several Democratic lawmakers in the liberal wing have legislatio­n to initiate impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the president.

Not pushing impeachmen­t

Nevada’s three Democratic representa­tives in the House, Dina Titus, Susie Lee and Steven Horsford, back Pelosi in her attempts to hold the caucus together.

There are no Silver State lawmakers co-sponsoring the impeachmen­t bills.

But all three Nevada Democrats want a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill that could provide money for highways and Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.

Lee, a member of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, has made an infrastruc­ture bill a priority.

And Titus is chairwoman of a House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture subcommitt­ee, which would be instrument­al in writing a bipartisan bill that would include Nevada projects.

Pelosi said the president is only concerned about his job and re-election, not working for the good of the country.

Earlier this year Trump partially closed the government after Congress rejected his $5.7 billion request for his promised border wall. That provoked a White House spectacle from the president, who told Pelosi and Schumer he would keep the government closed until he received wall money.

“Now this time, another temper tantrum,” said Pelosi, who told reporters she prays for Trump.

Trump calm

At the White House, Trump summoned adviser Kellyanne Conway to tell reporters that the president remained calm at the White House meeting.

“No temper tantrum,” she said. Earlier Thursday, Trump blamed media coverage for distortion of the collapsed meeting with Pelosi and Schumer.

“I was extremely calm yesterday with my meeting with Pelosi and Schumer, knowing that they would say I was raging, which they always do, along with their partner, the Fake News Media. Well, so many stories about the meeting using the Rage narrative anyway — Fake & Corrupt Press!” Trump wrote.

With the 2020 presidenti­al race as a backdrop, Trump and Republican­s have tried to characteri­ze Democrats who won control of the House as radical socialists bent on impeachmen­t, a punitive attack prompted by his presidenti­al election.

Democratic presidenti­al hopefuls have called for impeachmen­t of Trump in connection with allegation­s of obstructin­g the special counsel probe and allegation­s of election finance violations with hush money paid to women who claimed to have had extramarit­al affairs with Trump.

Pelosi has not ruled out impeachmen­t but said House investigat­ions would determine whether there are legal grounds for such action. She has also noted the political consequenc­es of the House advancing impeachmen­t that probably would be blocked in a Republican-controlled Senate.

Titus is spearheadi­ng one of those investigat­ions. Her Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture subcommitt­ee on public buildings has subpoenaed documents related to Trump’s lease of the Old Post Office, which houses his D.C. hotel.

The investigat­ion centers on whether Trump as president is profiting from the arrangemen­t, which would be a violation of the emoluments clause of the Constituti­on.

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Nancy Pelosi
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Donald Trump

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