How Trump’s health care loss will shape his presidency
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Political capital spent?And some polls showing Trump’s approval rating dipping below 40% have undercut the leverage of a new presidency, making it tougher still to drive ambitious bills into law.There are still plenty of whispers about the fractious nature of the West Wing itself. Stories of rivalry and infighting have been proliferating since the start of the election — apparently owing to Trump’s habit of setting up rival centers of influence in his own operation to create chaos in which he believes he can thrive.If the President “wanted to end the infighting, he could end it,” a senior administration official told CNN’s Borger. And amid rumors that Chief of Staff Reince Priebus could pay the price for health care reform’s failure with his job, the source said that if the Wisconsin Republican is in trouble “it’s because of reasons other than health care. Things are not run very smoothly.” But there’s plenty of blame to go around.Once again, the fractious Republican coalition seems unsuited for government, as House Speaker Paul Ryan remarked himself on Friday.And while some on Trump’s team may look to blame the intransigent Freedom Caucus or Ryan’s insistence in pushing a brand of conservative reform that seems an odd fit for Trump’s ideological coalition, the President’s team knows it must up its game and embrace a more inclusive, strategic approach in his next legislative fight.Two senior administration officials acknowledged to CNN that the White House should have made earlier appeals to outside conservative groups and taken a bigger role in driving the strategy to sell the health care bill — rather than play a supporting role to House GOP leaders — from the outset.“Going forward you’re going to see the White House play a more active role on the front end in terms of language and strategy out of the gate,” one of the officials said.Priebus meanwhile went out of his way on Sunday to smooth over any suggestion that Trump and Ryan were at odds, after rumblings to that effect from administration officials and Capitol Hill Republicans in anonymous accounts on Friday.“He talked to Paul Ryan yesterday for about an hour. He believes what he said in the Oval Office on Friday. He doesn’t blame Paul Ryan,” Priebus said on “Fox News Sunday.”Incredibly, after Trump spent months demonizing Washington and playing up its dysfunctional nature, and chief strategist Steve Bannon’s spent extensive time spent fueling GOP infighting as head of Breitbart News, Trump’s team still seems to have underestimated the treacherous political forces that simmer below its surface.A second senior administration official conceded that the White House underestimated “how deep the animosity is in the Republican conference,” believing that the pledge to repeal and replace Obamacare would outweigh the fine points that stirred factional rivalries.“It’s more poisonous than at any point,” the official said, adding that Republicans’ ability to mend fences internally may define whether the White House is successful in its subsequent attempts at major legislation like tax reform and an infrastructure bill. Democrats risingDemocrats, some of whom Trump will need to pass a tax overhaul, are already feeling emboldened by Republicans’ failure to work in lockstep to repeal President Barack Obama’s proudest achievement. It may be that the drama of the last few days has given the party the sense of purpose that has been lacking as shell-shocked Democrats try to move past Hillary Clinton’s defeat in November.“Today is a great day for our country, it’s a victory — what happened on the floor is a victory for the American people, for our seniors, for people with disabilities, for our children, for our veterans,” said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. “Quite frankly, I thought they might have accomplished something in the first couple of months.” All eyes on Trump, Ryan relationship after health care defeatTrump blamed Democrats Friday for his failure to pass the health care bill — an odd tactic since Republicans dominate Congress. But he also signaled he was willing to work with them on subsequent legislation — including a potential attempt to save Obamacare, which the President insists is “imploding.”But it seems just as likely that if his presidency continues to struggle, Democrats will see little political imperative to help out a Republican president who has maligned Obama and made little attempt to enroll them in the first health care reform effort.Of course, 66 days is too soon to judge a four-year presidential term, but it’s clear that Trump cannot afford a repeat of the disastrous Obamacare drama as he moves to his next big legislative battles.Whether Trump is prepared to soberly analyze what went wrong, and hold himself as accountable as those around him in his White House and Capitol Hill will go a long way to deciding whether his reeling presidency can make a comeback.So far, his CEO brand of leadership appears to be less effective in the political arena than it had been in the boardroom.But it’s not too late.CNN Discover more from NewsBreakers
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