USA TODAY US Edition

100THE FIRST DAYS OF THE REPUBLICAN CONGRESS

The progress, stumbles and hopes,

- Susan Davis WASHINGTON

Now that the first 100 days of the first GOP-controlled Congress in nearly a decade are in the rearview mirror, Republican­s say the party is knocking the dust off its governing playbook for what could be one of the more productive legislativ­e periods in recent years.

“When the American people elect divided government they don’t expect nothing to happen,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in an interview with USA TODAY Wednesday, the 100th day of the new Congress. “What they anticipate will happen is people on both sides will look for things they can agree on to go forward.”

If it happens, it could mark a new era on Capitol Hill, where the previous four years of one party controllin­g the Senate and the other the House resulted in the least productive legislativ­e era on record. Stalemates fueled partisansh­ip and historical­ly low ratings — the latest USA TODAY/ Suffolk University poll released Monday gave the body an 11% approval.

Given where it started, there may be no place for this Congress to go but up.

Though there have been miscalcula­tions and early setbacks, the first 100 days of the 114th Congress offered signs of progress. A rare alignment of policy goals between Republican­s and the Obama administra­tion on issues such as trade and cyber security combined with the party’s desire to prove it can govern responsibl­y before the 2016 elections, contributi­ng to a political climate that could yield results.

“What I want the American people to think about this new Congress is that we’re a responsibl­e, right-of-center, governing majority ... and if you give us the opportunit­y to join this right-ofcenter, responsibl­e governing majority with a Republican president, we’ll change the country,” McConnell said. HOPE AMID STUMBLES The first three months also showed how Republican­s could blow it.

House Republican­s in particular continue to grapple with divisions that handed the GOP a string of early, embarrassi­ng defeats on border security, abortion and education legislatio­n when they couldn’t muster the votes to pass their own bills and had to pull them from floor considerat­ion.

Focusing on contentiou­s social issues such as abortion right out of the gate instead of kitchentab­le economic issues as they pledged in their campaigns opened the door to Democratic criticism that the GOP was a wedge-issue party.

Across the U.S. Capitol, Senate Republican­s have to contend with the same minority rights they used to thwart Democrats when that party was in control.

An ill-fated GOP strategy to protest President Obama’s executive orders on immigratio­n threatened to shut down the Department of Homeland Security in February. The gambit undermined the GOP’s goal to present itself as a responsibl­e, governing party when it took full control of the legislativ­e branch in January for the first time since 2006.

Most Americans’ view of Congress hasn’t changed. The USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll showed 60% view the federal government working about the same under GOP congressio­nal control; 22% said it was working worse, 8% said it was working better and 10% are undecided.

Republican­s can boast some early successes that have encouraged lawmakers in both parties on the year ahead.

Republican­s are on track to approve by the end of April the first budget since 2009 and the first GOP budget since 2006. The budget is non-binding and doesn’t have the force of law, but it’s an achievemen­t for a party eager to earn the public’s trust.

House Speaker John Boehner, R- Ohio, and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., reached a significan­t bipartisan deal in late March to fix the system that calculates Medicare reimbursem­ents for doctors — a problem Congress had punted on for 17 years.

“It was, frankly, quite a success,” Boehner said. The legislatio­n passed with 392 votes in favor, an overwhelmi­ng show of support for a measure affecting the usually contentiou­s and costly debate over entitlemen­t programs. The Senate approved the deal 92-8 on Tuesday.

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., praised the legislatio­n as the way “Congress ought to work, can work and should work on behalf of the American people.”

Hoyer contended that the only way for Republican­s to achieve real success is to work with Democrats, which they were reluctant to do when Democrats were in charge.

“The bills that were signed into law were largely signed into law because the Democratic Party supported them, in some cases with a majority of support for them,” he said.

That dynamic was on display Tuesday, when legislatio­n by Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Bob Corker, R-Tenn.; Bob Menendez, D-N.J.; and Ben Cardin, D-Md., that would allow for congressio­nal review of any internatio­nal deal with Iran over its nuclear weapons program sailed out of committee with unanimous support. The White House backed off an initial veto threat, a response in part to growing Democratic support.

POTENTIAL FOR PROGRESS There is promise on a number of policy fronts where bipartisan efforts are underway, particular­ly in the Senate, where 60 votes are normally required to move legislatio­n of any depth. For example:

uSenate Finance Committee leaders Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Ron Wyden, D- Ore., are working on legislatio­n that would give the president “fast-track” negotiatin­g authority to advance a pending trade pact between the United States and 11 nations throughout the Asia-Pacific region. The measure — largely opposed by Democrats — has been a top priority of the Obama administra­tion and Republican­s.

uSenate Intelligen­ce Committee leaders Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., worked together to approve out of committee on a 14-1 vote last month legislatio­n that would enhance the nation’s cyber security laws in the wake of a number of high-profile hackings. The administra­tion supports the bill, and congressio­nal action is likely this year.

uSenate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee leaders Lamar Alexander, RTenn., and Patty Murray, DWash., recently unveiled a bipartisan framework to update the No Child Left Behind education law after two months of negotiatio­ns.

uSenate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee leaders James Inhofe, R- Okla., and Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. — two of the Senate’s most philosophi­cally opposed duos — are working together to advance a long-term highway bill this year.

“I think the goal is to achieve some victories on things where we can work together,” said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va.

Despite opportunit­ies for consensus, McConnell cautioned against the possibilit­y of any “grand bargains” with the administra­tion.

“Regretfull­y, I don’t think this is going to a Clinton or Reagan divided-government period, tackling really huge matters,” he said, citing past efforts to reach sweeping deals on overhaulin­g the tax code or entitlemen­t programs such as Medicare.

But, he said, there is still “a litany of things that can get a presidenti­al signature.”

ALL EYES ON 2016

The eagerness by GOP leaders to notch legislativ­e victories is undoubtedl­y fueled by the party’s ambitions to win the White House. Though voters handed Republican­s control of the U.S. Senate and the largest House majority since the Hoover administra­tion, the public’s estimation of the GOP is still fairly low.

A Gallup poll in early March showed a majority, 53%, have an unfavorabl­e view and 37% a favorable view of the GOP.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said this week that his goal is to eliminate the culture of legislativ­e “cliffs” that have forced congressio­nal brinkmansh­ip over tax cuts, government funding and protecting the nation’s credit.

“Every time you get a cliff coming forward, it takes you away from all the bigger policies of what you want to do,” he said. “The more cliffs we get taken away, the stronger I think the future holds for where we’re going to go.”

McCarthy’s message was clear: If the public can’t trust Republican­s with Congress, voters will be reluctant to reward them in 2016. So how can lawmakers help their eventual nominee capture the White House after eight years of Democratic control?

“Show we can govern,” McCarthy said.

The new Senate majority leader echoed what seems like an obvious goal, but one that has been elusive in recent years.

“We’re going to make an all-out effort to do the basic work of government,” McConnell said.

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