Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tussle pitting Democrats against president heats up

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The rift between President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Democrats appeared to be widening Thursday, a day after he abruptly ended a meeting with them at the White House on infrastruc­ture.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Thursday openly questioned Trump’s fitness to remain in office.

“I wish that his family or his administra­tion or his staff would have an interventi­on for the good of the country,” Pelosi said at her weekly news conference, adding that she prays for him and the nation.

Trump responded by calling her “crazy.”

“She’s a mess,” Trump told reporters at an afternoon news conference in which he lined up White House staff members to testify to his calmness at the meeting. “Cryin’ Chuck, Crazy Nancy … I watched Nancy and she was all crazy yesterday,” he claimed.

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

On Wednesday, Trump walked out of the meeting with Pelosi of California and Senate Democratic leader

Charles Schumer of New York, demanding an end to all congressio­nal investigat­ions before he would work with Congress on infrastruc­ture and other matters. He repeated the demand in the Rose Garden moments after leaving the meeting.

By Thursday, as Congress prepared to recess for the Memorial Day break, both sides were questionin­g each other’s stability, with the president insisting on Twitter that he was calm when he left the White House meeting after just three minutes.

Pelosi said Trump has establishe­d a pattern of unpredicta­bility, and at one point she even joked about the 25th Amendment, the Constituti­on’s provision laying out the procedure for replacing a president.

“Maybe he wants to take a leave of absence,” she said. Asked whether she’s concerned about Trump’s well-being, she replied, “I am.”

Pelosi also said the White House is “crying out” for the Democrats to open impeachmen­t hearings. White House aides believe that if Democrats move to impeach, Trump would be acquitted in the GOP-controlled Senate, supporting his assertion that he’s a victim of Democratic harassment and helping him toward re-election. But the president denied that he’s urging the Democrats on.

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

Schumer blasted Trump on Thursday as “an erratic, helter-skelter, get-nothingdon­e president.”

During a morning television appearance, Schumer said “the show” put on by Trump on Wednesday was intended as a “cover-up” of his administra­tion’s inability to work with Congress on legislativ­e priorities such as infrastruc­ture.

“If he were smart, he’d sit down with us,” Schumer said on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. “We want to do this, and he’s incapable of it.”

Asked at another point in

the interview if he considers Trump a competent president, Schumer said no.

In a separate MSNBC interview, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., also suggested that Trump was a difficult person with whom to negotiate.

“Very frankly the sad thing is that there are too many instances where I’ve sat with the president in the White House … where he says one thing and that representa­tion lasts for minutes, for hours, maybe a few days at most, and then the position changes,” he said.

Hoyer was also critical of Trump’s decision to abruptly end the meeting on infrastruc­ture.

“What we saw yesterday was a refusal to lead,” Hoyer said. “He abandoned any leadership, any desire to move forward, any constructi­ve engagement with the Congress of the United States.”

In tweets late Wednesday and Thursday morning, Trump sought to portray Democrats as the obstacle to cooperatio­n on infrastruc­ture, prescripti­on-drug costs and other issues.

In one tweet, he branded Democrats “THE DO NOTHING PARTY!”

“The Democrats are getting nothing done in Congress. All of their effort is about a Re-Do of the Mueller Report, which didn’t turn out the way they wanted,” Trump wrote.

He was referring to the report by special counsel Robert Mueller into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. House Democrats are continuing to look into whether Trump sought to obstruct the investigat­ion and have been frustrated by what they call stonewalli­ng from the White House in response to subpoenas related to that and other probes of the administra­tion.

The rift has raised questions about whether Democrats and Trump could work together on must-do tasks this year, such as raising the debt limit and funding the government. White House spokesman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said staff-level work on critical policy and spending continues.

But Sanders also said on CNN that it was “lunacy” and “insane” for Democrats to think everyone could just proceed after Pelosi accused Trump of a “cover-up” just before the meeting Wednesday.

“It’s very hard to have a meeting where you accuse the president of the United States of a crime and an hour later show up and act as if nothing has happened,” Sanders told reporters outside the White House.

Sanders insisted that Trump’s walkout Wednesday wasn’t planned before Pelosi’s comments. Asked why Trump couldn’t work with Democrats after Pelosi’s comments, Sanders said, “The president’s feelings weren’t hurt. She accused him of a crime. Let that sink in.”

 ?? AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Asked Thursday whether she’s concerned about President Donald Trump’s well-being, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi replied, “I am.”
AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Asked Thursday whether she’s concerned about President Donald Trump’s well-being, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi replied, “I am.”

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