Los Angeles Times

Obama charm offensive sows goodwill

The president’s bid for better ties with GOP rivals has included meetings over meals.

- By Kathleen Hennessey and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Earlier this year, President Obama joked that his daughters wanted to spend less time with him now that they were older, so he might ask Republican­s to the White House to keep him company. Maybe he wasn’t kidding. After fitful attempts in his first term to improve testy relations with congressio­nal Republican­s, Obama has launched a very public campaign to build stronger ties with his GOP rivals.

He treated a dozen senators to dinner Wednesday and plans to lunch with more lawmakers next week.

On Thursday, Obama’s charm offensive set the table for one of the hardest nuts to crack — the top Republican budget expert, Rep. Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, who as the GOP vice presidenti­al candidate tried to evict Obama from the executive mansion where he was invited to lunch.

Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee, and his Democratic counterpar­t, Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, sat down with Obama for lentil soup and sea bass in a meeting that Ryan described as a “frank” and the White House called “constructi­ve.”

White House officials say the president is trying to find congressio­nal allies to chart a new path on deficit reduction. Both parties have an interest in trying to strike a big deal, preferably before the next budget showdown in summer, when Obama must ask Congress to raise the legal limit on the national debt.

The four-to-five-month window offers Obama a chance to expand his contacts beyond House Speaker John A. Boehner and the Republican leaders he has tangled with previously. Administra­tion officials say the White House is trying to build trust with lawmakers — or at least squelch the oftrepeate­d charge that the president prefers campaignin­g against Republican­s to working with them.

The course correction appears, for now, to be sowing seeds of goodwill.

At the Jefferson Hotel, the Republican senators and the president engaged in what they described as an unusually honest exchange about the nation’s fiscal problems.

“Heartfelt,” Sen. John Hoeven of North Dakota put it.

“Sincere,” said Sen. John McCain of Arizona, who sat to the president’s right.

“Serious,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who was on Obama’s left.

Even Obama’s body language was “agreeable,” one senator said.

“To really pour out our hearts and souls on what we believe is necessary to address our long-term debt and deficit problems, the president was receptive to listening to that,” said Sen. Dan Coats of Indiana.

As the group discussed changes to entitlemen­t programs and an overhaul of the tax code, Obama expressed concern that Americans may not fully understand the fiscal challenges of the Medicare program.

Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin told the president that he was in a unique position to explain the problem and help create public support for reforms.

“If he would do that, it would be an incredibly positive sign,” the senator said. “I’d try to do it, but I’m just a little senator from Wisconsin. I don’t command the microphone.”

Those kinds of actions from the president, senators said, is what they want to see as proof of Obama’s intent.

“We really need to stay in this intense dialogue for the next four to five months,” Hoeven said.

But even in the earliest stages of Obama’s new inside game, the tricky task of courting rivals was clear.

Obama’s outreach offensive comes as Organizing for Action, a group formed out of his campaign organizati­on, is revving up campaignst­yle pressure on potential GOP allies. The targets include Sen. Kelly Ayotte (RN.H.), a dinner guest with whom Obama exchanged pleasantri­es about their children, and Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who was on the receiving end of an Obama call this week as he seeks to form a “common sense” caucus.

And Republican­s have to mind their own politics.

Those who dined with Obama faced heat from tea party activists who suggested they should have been in the Senate chamber with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) as he filibuster­ed John Brennan’s nomination as CIA director.

This split in the GOP is part of what has made nego- tiating with the Republican­s over debt reduction a challenge for the president. The White House believes Boehner (R-Ohio) has too little control over House Republican­s to be an effective negotiatin­g partner, while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) , who faces a potentiall­y tough reelection in 2014, has been a fierce party stalwart and only an occasional deal maker.

Graham, who is up for reelection next year, brushed off worries about a backlash.

“If I can’t go have dinner with the president of the United States to talk about the problems that face our nation,” he said, “I shouldn’t be running.” kathleen.hennessey@latimes.com lisa.mascaro@latimes.com Times staff writers Christi Parsons and Matea Gold contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Cliff Owen
Associated Press ?? SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R-Ariz.) leaves the Jefferson Hotel after a dinner meeting with President Obama.
Cliff Owen Associated Press SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R-Ariz.) leaves the Jefferson Hotel after a dinner meeting with President Obama.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States