Texarkana Gazette

Trump, Democrats confront thorny life under a divided Congress

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WASHINGTON— Suddenly facing life under divided government, President Donald Trump and congressio­nal leaders talked bipartisan­ship Wednesday but then bluntly previewed the fault lines to come. Trump threatened to go after House Democrats who try to investigat­e him, while Rep. Nancy Pelosi said her party would be “a check and balance” against the White House.

The day after midterm elections reset Washington, Trump took a victory lap at a raucous news conference, celebratin­g Republican Senate wins but distancing himself from the GOP’s loss of the House. He said he was interested in working with House Democrats but was ready to respond if he felt he was being ill-treated.

As long as Republican­s have controlled both houses of Congress, Democrats have been hampered in pursuing any significan­t probes of Trump and his administra­tion, and he made it clear he expects the Senate to follow that course.

“They can play that game,” he said of possible House Democratic investigat­ions, “but we can play it better, because we have a thing called the United States Senate.”

On Capitol Hill, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell said Democrats must decide how much “harassment” they want to pursue against Trump, while suggesting there could be limited opportunit­ies to work across the aisle. And Pelosi, who is expected to run for a second stint as speaker when Democrats take the House majority in January, said the party has “a responsibi­lity to seek common ground where we can.” But she added, “Where we cannot, we must stand our ground.”

After midterm elections that served as a referendum on Trump’s divisive presidency, Congress and the White House reckoned Wednesday with expected Republican gains in the Senate and a Democratic flip of the House. The early positionin­g provided the first glimpse of how all parties will balance calls for bipartisan­ship with an appetite for anger going into the next two years.

By turns combative and conciliato­ry, Trump said Democrats and Republican­s should set aside partisansh­ip to work together. On legislativ­e prospects, Trump said he could potentiall­y work with Democrats on issues

such as taxes, infrastruc­ture and health care, saying it “really could be a beautiful, bipartisan type of situation.”

And Pelosi, during a news conference that was delayed because of Trump’s lengthy remarks, said she had worked productive­ly with President George W. Bush when she was speaker a decade ago on taxes and other issues, and she welcomed the chance to do so again with Trump.

“We’d like to work together so our legislatio­n will be bipartisan,” she said.

Still, Pelosi said Democrats weren’t elected to be “a rubber stamp” for Trump.

Some House Democrats have threatened to use the subpoena power they will gain in January to investigat­e Trump and administra­tion actions. But, he warned, he will respond in kind and government will suffer.

Plus, he said, Democrats have “nothing, zero,” on him. Of the special counsel’s Russia investigat­ion that has shadowed his administra­tion for more than 18 months, Trump said, “I could end it right now” but “I let it go on.”

Trump took credit for Republican wins in the Senate, claiming his “vigorous campaignin­g stopped the blue wave” that never fully materializ­e. He was quick to distance himself from losing GOP House members who had been critical of his heated rhetoric, citing Florida Rep. Carlos Curbelo and Colorado Rep. Mike Coffman, among others.

“Too bad, Mike,” Trump said of Coffman, before turning on Utah’s Mia Love, whose race remained too close to call.

“Mia Love gave me no love and she lost,” Trump said.

Trump’s claim that those who backed him were successful was not without exceptions. Republican Sen. Dean Heller of Nevada, for example was defeated although he had embraced Trump, with both highlighti­ng their desire to get more of the president’s judicial nominees confirmed, a top priority for many social conservati­ves.

The president also suggested that, somehow, losing a House majority could be beneficial to his agenda because Democrats will want to work with him.

“I can see it being extremely good politicall­y,” he said.

The president’s rebuke was felt on Capitol Hill. Rep. Ryan Costello, a Republican from Pennsylvan­ia who announced his retirement earlier this year, tweeted his displeasur­e: “To deal w harassment & filth spewed at GOP MOC’s in tough seats every day for 2 yrs, bc of POTUS; to bite ur lip more times you’d care to; to disagree & separate from POTUS on principle & civility in ur campaign; to lose bc of POTUS & have him piss on u. Angers me to my core.”

Shortly thereafter, however, it was announced that Attorney General Jeff Sessions had been forced out. His departure followed 18 months of criticism and insults from Trump, who had appointed him but objected to Sessions’ stepping aside from the Russia probe rather than guiding. It.

On the potential for House investigat­ions, Pelosi said Democrats will have a “responsibi­lity for oversight” when they take charge in January and she will leave final decisions to committees. She wouldn’t answer a question about whether Democrats will seek Trump’s tax filings, but said committee requests for documents and hearings won’t be “scattersho­t.”

Democrats are expected to investigat­e Trump’s business dealings, his Cabinet’s conduct and his campaign’s possible ties to Russia, among other issues.

“We’ll know what we are doing and we’ll do it right,” she said.

Pelosi spoke with Trump and McConnell after the Democrats’ victory. McConnell said Wednesday that the two had discussed how they might “find a way forward” in a divided Congress.

He and Pelosi, the Kentucky senator said, are “not unfamiliar” with one another as longtime leaders and colleagues.

As for congressio­nal action the rest of this year, he said he could not imagine taking up immigratio­n and acknowledg­ed that the Democratic House and Republican Senate were likely to go their separate ways when it comes to the legislativ­e agenda

“Areas for legislativ­e agreement will be more limited,” he said.

“The one issue that Leader Pelosi and I discussed this morning where there could be a possible bipartisan agreement would be something on infrastruc­ture, but there could be a lot of other things,” he said.

McConnell also echoed Trumps’ warnings on investigat­ions, saying: “The Democrats in the House will have to decide just how much presidenti­al harassment they think is good strategy.”

 ?? AP Photo/Evan Vucci ?? ■ President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference Wednesday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci ■ President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference Wednesday in the East Room of the White House in Washington.

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