The White House issued a warning to Republicans yesterday.
In the wake of the failure of the president’s health care reform bill, the
Trump Administration signaled that it is willing to reach out to Democrats to
advance its agenda if it can’t win support from the various Republican
factions.
White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus underscored the
potential shift in strategy on “Fox News Sunday” (quoted in the Wall
Street Journal). “This president is not going to be a partisan president,” Priebus
said. “I think it's time for our folks to come together, and I also think it's
time to potentially get a few moderate Democrats on board as well.”
When asked if President Trump would move on from health care
reform and allow the implosion of Obamacare to run its course as he threatened
in a tweet,
Politico
notes that Priebus answered, “I don't think the president is closing the door
on anything.”
“It's more or less a warning shot that we are willing to
talk to anyone. We always have been,” he said in Time.
“I think more so now than ever, it's time for both parties to come together and
get to real reforms in this country.”
Since the decision to remove the AHCA bill from consideration
on Friday, President Trump has alternately blamed the Democrats, blamed the
House Freedom Caucus and reached out to Democrats.
The Washington
Times reports that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) was
receptive to Trump’s overtures. “We Democrats, provided our Republican
colleagues drop [repeal and replace] and stop undermining the ACA, are willing
to work with our Republican friends — as long as they say no more repeal,” Mr.
Schumer said. Schumer added in Time that, “if he changes, he could have a
different presidency.”
With Republicans holding 52 seats in the Senate, virtually
all reform legislation is subject to Democrat filibusters. A minimum of eight Democrats
must cross over to kill the filibuster and allow a vote on any individual bill.
The
Resurgent speculated in January that President Trump might forge a bipartisan
coalition of moderate Democrats and Republicans on a number of issues where the
president’s platform is at odds with traditional Republican principles. During
the campaign, Mr. Trump said that he wouldn’t mind being a “free agent” in his
dealings with Congress.
The price for dealing with the Democrats on health care
would be giving up the full repeal of Obamacare. Republicans currently don’t have
enough votes for repeal, but many, including those in the House Freedom Caucus,
would refuse to vote for anything less. The price of bringing Democrats on
board other items in the Republican agenda, from tax reform to immigration, is
likely to be just as unpalatable. The more the president moves to the left to
appeal to Democrats, the more Republicans he will lose. The question is whether
he can find a workable majority in the middle.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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