What did I say?
President Donald Trump on Friday delivered a message to congressional Republicans, essentially telling them their inaction led him to cut a deal with Democrats this week.
What else did I say?
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told the Washington Post that Trump made the debt ceiling deal with Democrats in order “to move on to big-ticket items” like tax reform. Ross cited the short congressional schedule in September as a reason for getting the debt ceiling settled.
And, again, didn’t I make this point repeatedly, too?
Trump also used the Senate’s rules to justify his decision to strike a deal that led Senate leaders to attach a three-month debt ceiling suspension and three-month government-funding bill to a Hurricane Harvey relief bill and send it to the House…
….He called the Senate’s legislative 60-vote threshold a “Repub Death Wish!” The president wrote the rule will “never allow the Republicans to pass even great legislation. 8 Dems control – will rarely get 60 (vs. 51) votes.”
Hence, his decision to cut a deal with Schumer to punt major decisions on the federal borrowing limit and government spending until early December.
And, as if it isn’t already clear:
Republicans must start the Tax Reform/Tax Cut legislation ASAP. Don’t wait until the end of September. Needed now more than ever. Hurry!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 8, 2017
In my first reaction to the deal before the narrative about the debt ceiling kicked in, I said that the Republicans did well because “it should be much easier now to work on reauthorizations for Defense and the FAA, CHIP and flood insurance programs, and perhaps even to do a little work on the budget.”
That last bit about doing “a little work on the budget” was a stand-in for “get going on tax reform.” That’s because, as I’ve explained, the Republicans cannot use reconciliation rules to pass tax cuts without worrying about the filibuster unless they first pass a new budget. In taking fights over disaster relief, a government shutdown and a credit default off the table, the president gave the Republicans more legislative days to work on a budget. Here’s what I said yesterday about that aspect of the deal:
Schumer and Pelosi look like genius negotiators. And, it’s true, they did very well. But they actually got no more than they were due. In return for their support, they made no concessions and got pretty much nothing else in return. Their one bonus was the short 90-day duration of the deal, because that will allow them to torment the Republicans all over again in December. But they also did the Republicans a big favor by getting them out of a huge jam and giving them back a bunch of legislative days that they can now use to create mischief. In any case, they had needs when they want into the meeting, and those needs were met.
I understand if your default setting is to disbelieve everything that the president and his cabinet members say, but sometimes they’re giving you the straight dope.
They had to make a deal with the Democrats because the Republicans cannot muster the votes on their own, without significant Democratic support, to pay our bills and keep the government operating. As long as the filibuster is in place, this will make it impossible to ram home the vast majority of their agenda. There was way too much on the Republicans’ plate for September, and what was getting left behind was work on the budget which is a prerequisite for doing a tax cut that doesn’t take the Democrats into account.
Whether or not Trump wanted to humiliate or dominate Ryan and McConnell, his basic decisions were made for him. They were made for him because he took some actions and failed to take others that would have allowed to him to shape his circumstances. He was operating in a fantasy land for as long as he could, but he eventually came up against hard deadlines and the realization that Ryan and McConnell had sold him a bill of goods.
A smarter, savvier president would have been able to see this coming way before now. He would have surrounded himself with experienced advisors and listened to them. He would have worked to shape the battlefield in his favor rather than blindly walking into a trap.
But I think it’s a mistake to look at a man in a trap and put more weight on their quirks of personality than on the design of the trap. If there are only a couple of ways to escape, they’re going to pursue one of those plans.
My only question with Trump was whether anyone would ever be able to get him to understand his predicament and his real choices before it is was so late in the game that we defaulted despite his best efforts. Fortunately, he figured it out before we got to that point.
When, exactly, did he realize that he’d had to make this pivot?
My guess is that it was a process that began after Obamacare repeal finally failed in early August and that continued in fits and starts throughout last month. Hurricane Harvey opened up new and unexpected avenues to exploit, which he was quick to understand. The hurricane also provided a lifeline to Ryan and McConnell because it gave them a way to cave on the debt ceiling and a clean CR without inviting a real revolt from their caucuses which are filled with people who were still harboring delusions about what they could get by playing Russian roulette.
To be honest, psychological analysis is an important tool, but an unreliable one. It’s never easier to predict what people will do than when they have to act and have very few options. I could not tell you what the hell Trump was going to do in June and July, but it was a lot easier to predict his actions in September. I knew his options would be narrowed and the possibility of further procrastination would be gone.
Ryan and McConnell should be grateful to Trump right now because he got them out of a jam and gave them time to work on tax reform. Instead, they’re bitching about the debt ceiling. And that’s the same debt ceiling that true conservatives are never supposed to raise, let alone for eighteen months, without getting big cuts in entitlements and non-defense discretionary spending. That just shows how bankrupt conservative rhetoric really is, and they wonder why the president didn’t take their side?
Ryan and McConnell just got bailed out of the end-of-September disaster that would had had their names on in all caps.
They both know it too, which is why they brought the compromise bills up for a vote with no grandstanding or complaining. And they’re both unusually quiet right now too. They aren’t out in front of the teevee cameras telling a bunch of lies about what they just did.
Chastened they are, though that’s probably going too far.
Your analysis of these recent events has really been excellent, but a question:
You’ve frequently stressed that Trump seemed not to have the faintest idea how legislation is formulated and advanced through Congress. (His tweets have certainly reflected that.) Furthermore, all or nearly all of your readers are convinced by a lot of empirical evidence that Trump is a white nationalist bigot, and interpreted revocation of DACA as just one more example of Trump’s bigotry and playing to his white nationalist base. Were we all wrong? Has Trump been playing us for fools? After all, the whole point of his cutting the deal with Schumer and Pelosi was to free up time for working on legislation other than emergency stuff. And Trump is tweeting about getting the DREAM Act passed and signed, I believe. (You yourself wrote that Trump had “sandbagged” Sessions over the DACA revocation.)
A good question.
Trump doesn’t want to deport the Dreamers. That doesn’t make him any less of a raging racist asshole. But he does want to sign the Dream Act. Most Republicans agree with him on that, by the way.
His decision to pardon Arpaio so prematurely was probably part of a head fake that also included announcing the end of DACA and then more quietly called for passage of the DREAM Act.
He got all the right people yelling at him and then shivved his most racist allies hoping they wouldn’t notice.
Ordinarily, I’m reluctant to attribute even this basic level of planning and foresight into Trump’s political thinking, but he knew his DACA decision was coming for a while and had a chance to choose how to make the announcement. Sending Sessions out was part of that.
I agree with 99% of everything you say, but I do not believe for a second that the Arpaio pardon was a head fake, nor do I believe that Trump’s decision to force Congress’ hand on DACA was some kind of end-around to getting the DREAM Act passed.
Regarding Arpaio, the President was suffering in the polls after his mishandling of the Charlottesville events and was trying to shore-up his base. So he threw them some red meat in hopes of rallying their support and improving his polls.
Ending DACA was pushed by Sessions, and according to an article in the Hill, some White House Aides didn’t think Trump understood what he was agreeing to.
Chances are, Trump sided with the Dems because he wants them to stop the one thing he is most obsessed about: the Russian Investigation.
Javanka probably advised him that if he sides with Dems, and gets in their good graces, then they’ll be more likely to be nicer to him (These were the same folks that encouraged firing Comey b/c Dems would love it).
Meanwhile, Ryan/McConnell probably cannot wait to paint Trump and Dems as being in bed together so that they can distance themselves from him.
Trump is impulsive, he is not strategic.
Trump is impulsive and not strategic, but not to the complete exclusion of strategy. Remember, he’s constantly getting advice. The nature of the advice he’s getting has changed a lot since early August.
He threatens a shut down if he doesn’t get his wall money and then the adults sit him down and explain that Schumer won’t give him the wall money so stop saying that. And he does.
But they also tell him that they’re preparing a strategy on DACA that involves punting it to Congress while making it seem like he’s ending it. He understands this. He understands his base, insofar as they see through it, will be pissed.
That’s why Sessions gets sent out to give the good news while he quietly reveals the bad news after the fact.
Now Arpaio, I agree, could be part of this or not part of it. He certainly wasn’t advised to it by anyone but the Bannonities, and Bannon had just been shown the door.
I won’t insist on one answer or the other, but he definitely knew he was going to punt on DACA and call for the Dream Act to be make it on a legal footing. And he must have thought about how to make that go unnoticed.
The execution was nearly flawless, which makes me doubt it was a lucky strike.
He wants to Dream Act because Obama “couldn’t get it done.”
Yeah. That’s definitely something he’ll boast about at his little Rose Garden party, presuming he succeeds.
But this is actually deadline driven, just like the debt ceiling.
He didn’t want to go to court to defend DACA. He needed to keep his promise to end it. He had to make some hard decisions. He followed some pretty savvy advice, but it is still evil advice since it’s cruel in how it’s being done and there’s niobium’s guarantee that Congress will produce.
If they don’t, he’ll be in a real bind.
The head of the Freedom Caucus seems to think that Trump cutting a deal with the Democrats was a “one-off”.
I’ve read multiple places that DT doesn’t make a deal unless someone suffers something ill as a result. Even if Ryan and McConnell didn’t feel humiliated by this kabuki theater, DT most likely got his pound of flesh by thinking he humiliated them.
Any thoughts on Congress getting the ACA repeal/replace before the 30 Sep deadline? I’m hoping not, especially since McCain is insisting on regular order. How do they get a major legislation through regular order in the few days they have left on their calendar?
I second this question.
It’s not an administration priority at the moment. I guess, let’s keep an eye on it.
The problem with the ACA is that there is no consensus for what to replace it with, even within the GOP caucus. They couldn’t even get 50 votes for “skinny repeal”, which itself was nothing but a shell to get them to conference where they could try to hammer out something with the House.
Had they even passed “skinny repeal”, the whole thing very likely would have come to naught, because there is absolutely nothing that will satisy the Freedom Caucus on one hand and the Collins/Murkowski/Moore/Portman/Heller/Gardner axis on the other.
If they even TRY again with the ACA, they are likely bringing on yet another round of humiliation. I cannot imagine that is anything that anybody in Congress wants to deal with. It’s amazing that it even went on as long as it did, frankly.
There’s the ACA fix legislation to keep the market healthy for another year, which can get a good bipartisan majority, written by Lamar Alexander and Patty Murray. Bipartisan legislation is now possible–the Harvey/debt ceiling/continuing resolution party has killed the old Hastert rule dead. Trump will claim he has saved Obamacare which Obama could not do.
Hastert Rule not dead:
That was the point, for Ryan at least.
About the GOP breaking norms:
Robert Costa of the Washington Post had the scoop. Right-wingers are actually floating the idea of recruiting former House Speaker Newt Gingrich or former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum. (Fun fact: Anyone can be speaker of the House! The Constitution does not require that it be an elected member of Congress.) Costa writes that “the idea underscores [the Freedom Caucus’] desire to create trouble for GOP leaders if they believe their demands are not being addressed.”
Desperation drives stupid moves, apparently, and a search for past “greatness”.
One reason Ryan and McConnell might not be grateful for the chance to work on tax legislation is they can’t do that either, for the same reasons they couldn’t repeal the ACA, because there’s no Republican majority you can stitch together for anything any more. Reihan Salam is out there saying Republicans should give up on tax cuts.
I’d buy that except they’ll have to go through the motions anyway. At least this gives them the time to make an honest effort.
Honest effort, hah! Serious question though: do you think thie tax legislation will be attempted under regular order with r.s looking for some dem. support, or under reconciliation rules? I can’t really see how either approach would get through.
If they can pass a budget, it will have reconciliation rules for tax reform.
If they can’t pass a budget, regular order is the only option and they have to go to people like Ron Wyden to basically author it.
I must object to the word “honest” being applied to these people. I really don’t find much honesty in any of them. Perhaps “diligent” or “rigorous” would be more appropriate.
Real “reform” in the sense of restructuring the tax system is out, partly because there’s too many nutcase Republicans to get anything through with the narrow majorities, and partly because they don’t have the policy chops to do a major restructuring. Taxes are complicated.
A sunsetted tax cut for the rich is still possible and even likely IMO. It might not happen until the lame duck, when the political cost is past and they realize they are out of time.
“Ryan and McConnell should be grateful to Trump right now because he got them out of a jam and gave them time to work on tax reform. Instead, they’re bitching….”
Well, they have to bitch to convince the Republicans that it was a bad deal for them.
“Whether or not Trump wanted to humiliate or dominate Ryan and McConnell” When has Trump EVER NOT wanted to humiliate and dominate anyone. He lives for those moments when he gets to smirk at people who have no choice but to grin and bear it. He’s vastly more popular with the GOP base than they are and he’s permanently peeved at them for failing him by failing to repeal Obamacare.
Decades of right-wing brainwashing propaganda on FOX & hate radio has sowed this seed: “We have always been at war with East Asia!” And the old position becomes the new position and nobody blinks. So, he did what Trump always does to anybody close to him or dependent upon him in any way who displeases him – he turned on them like a junk yard dog and bit them.
That was his Shot Across the Bow to Congressional GOP. He is not a Tea-partier. He is not a Freedumb Caucus dweller. He owns the imbeciles of the base and can do what he likes. Because that mind control programming enables him to switch his position on any issue at any time to anything. At all.
So long as he caters to their hatreds for black, brown different people, he can do whatever he feels like and they will back him 100%. They will attack anybody he points his finger at! Ryan, McConnell, whoever.