The Sentinel-Record

Trump refuses to work with Democrats unless investigat­ions dropped

- LISA MASCARO MARY CLARE JALONICK The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump abruptly stalked out of a White House meeting with congressio­nal leaders Wednesday, flatly declaring he would no longer work with Democrats unless they drop all investigat­ions in the aftermath of the special counsel’s Trump-Russia report.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called it all “very, very, very strange” and said she was praying for Trump and the nation. Trump tweeted his thanks for her prayers but said he would not proceed down two tracks — investigat­ion and legislatio­n.

Democrats said his ultimatum seemed scripted, with signs declaring his innocence already prepared for his outdoor remarks that followed. Yet Trump’s unease with congressio­nal oversight and talk of what he called the “i-word” — impeachmen­t — now threatens to deprive him of legislativ­e accomplish­ments for the remainder of his term.

The scene playing out live on television was reminiscen­t of earlier ones at the White House, including during the federal government shutdown, when

Trump walked out on Democrats. While this standoff could benefit him politicall­y in the short term, with his tough talk stirring up supporters, it leaves his trade deals, a new budget and other goals in jeopardy as he heads into a re-election campaign. Democrats called it another Trump temper tantrum.

“I want to do infrastruc­ture,” Trump said he told Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, noting the scheduled topic of the meeting.

“But you know what? We can’t do it under these circumstan­ces,” he said he told them. “So get these phony investigat­ions over.”

Without ever shaking anyone’s hand, or even taking a seat, Trump turned and left the three-minute meeting. He strode to the Rose Garden where reporters and TV cameras had been assembled and proceeded to assail the Democrats, particular­ly Pelosi for her comment earlier in the morning on Capitol Hill that she believed the president was engaged in a “cover-up” of the Russia probe.

“I don’t do cover-ups,” Trump fumed.

Back on Capitol Hill, Pelosi said Trump “just took a pass” on working on national infrastruc­ture problems.

Flanked by Schumer and other House and Senate leaders, Pelosi said the Democrats had gone to the White House “to give this president the opportunit­y to have a signature infrastruc­ture initiative.”

The meeting had been set weeks ago, after Trump and the Democratic leaders agreed to talk further about a possible $2 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal. Democrats have been working with the president’s daughter Ivanka, and Trump was due to provide his ideas on how to pay for it.

But he told them he couldn’t engage on infrastruc­ture because Pelosi said “something terrible,” according to an administra­tion official and another person familiar with what happened in the room.

Democrats said they doubted he actually was ever going to put forward a plan. Schumer — who brought his own 35-page proposal to the meeting — said that when Trump “was forced to say how he would pay for it he had to run away.”

What started as a challengin­g day for Pelosi as she tries to tamp down growing calls for an impeachmen­t inquiry swiftly turned, with the attention going back on the president. Even some Republican­s noted the shift.

“In the end we’ve got work to do,” said Sen. John Cornyn, who called the meeting dramatic. “And I think the best thing we could do for the people we work for is to try to make progress where we can.”

Earlier Wednesday, House Democrats had convened for a closed-door meeting amid Trump’s stonewalli­ng of their investigat­ors, as a growing number of the party’s lawmakers say they want to open an impeachmen­t inquiry. They say it’s not necessaril­y aimed at removing the president from office but to bolster their position in court against his blocking their probes with broad claims of immunity. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York spoke up at the meeting, and some two dozen Democrats have signed on to the idea.

With her leadership team, Pelosi, who has resisted pressure to impeach, suggested patience. She pointed rank-and-file Democrats toward the legal battles that she said have already found success i n forcing Trump to comply with investigat­ions.

“We do believe it’s important to follow the facts,” Pelosi told reporters afterward. “We believe that no one is above the law, including the president of the United States, and we believe that the president of the United States is engaged in a cover-up.”

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the White House cannot block subpoenas for Trump’s financial records from Deutsche Bank, which has lent his real estate company millions of dollars. On Monday a federal judge also ruled against Trump in a separate financial records dispute with Congress, though his team filed a notice of appeal that is expected to keep the court battles running for months.

Pelosi said the court victories were “no surprise.”

The Democrats leaving that Capitol meeting appeared to be taking hers words into considerat­ion, even as many say the march to impeach becomes more inevitable. Tennessee Rep. Steve Cohen, who called for the impeachmen­t inquiry on Tuesday, said he could see both sides.

Of leaders’ reluctance, Cohen said “it’s a political concern rather than an actual constituti­onal one.”

Rep. Katie Hill, a freshman from a California swing district, said she is undecided on starting an impeachmen­t inquiry but wants to let the court action play out.

The more Trump “defies us, the more that it’s becoming an inevitabil­ity,” she said. But she doesn’t think the Democratic caucus “is there yet.”

Pelosi faces her own political calculatio­ns amid the push-pull of impeachmen­t. While Democrats have a majority in the House, and would likely find support for starting impeachmen­t proceeding­s, it could be a tighter vote than the 235-197 margin suggests. Many lawmakers come from relatively conservati­ve districts where Trump also has support.

Democrats have long said they can work on two tracks — conducting oversight and legislatin­g on their agenda of lower health care costs and infrastruc­ture investment. But Trump says they can’t do both.

“They can continue the Witch Hunt … or get back to work,” Trump tweeted.

Pelosi showed no signs of backing down.

“The fact is, in plain sight, in the public domain, this president is obstructin­g justice and he’s engaged in a cover-up, and that could be impeachabl­e,” Pelosi said during an event later at the liberal Center for American Progress.

“As they say, the cover up is frequently worse than the crime,” she said. She reminded that the third article of impeachmen­t against President Richard Nixon was his obstructio­n of Congress.

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