New York Magazine is mean, mean, mean.During the ill-fated first round of the Republican effort to repeal and replace Obamacare, President Trump suggested that he wouldn’t support a bill that hurts Americans, telling Fox News, “If we’re not going to take care of the people, I’m not signing anything.” Then he held a Rose Garden ceremony to celebrate the passage of the American Health Care Act, which was projected to cost 23 million people their insurance in the next decade.
Earlier this month, President Trump told a group of Republican senators that the House bill was “mean, mean, mean.” Yet he supported the nearly identical Senate version of the bill, which would cause 22 million people to lose their coverage by 2026. And when Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell postponed the vote on Tuesday, President Trump invited every Republican senator to the White House and urged them to keep at it.
New York Magazine
Good guess.The simplest explanation for President Trump’s inconsistent stance on the health legislation (which the White House prefers not to call Trumpcare) is that he habitually tells the person standing in front of him whatever he thinks they want to hear, and isn’t worried about getting his facts straight.
Might be important.On Tuesday, the New York Times highlighted another possibility: President Trump has no idea what’s in the bill.
A senator who supports the bill left the meeting at the White House with a sense that the president did not have a grasp of some basic elements of the Senate plan[...]
According to the Times, Trump likes to tell friends he’s a “closer,” and in one meeting during the House health-care fight he reportedly urged members of Congress to look at the optics, not the bill’s contents. “Forget about the little shit,” Trump said. “Let’s focus on the big picture here.”
This irked several of the congressmen, who felt details matter when you’re disrupting one-fifth of the economy.
Nor does he care because they're not talking about him.But even when focused on the politics of the health-care fight, Trump doesn’t appear to have a good sense of what’s happening in the Senate.
What?! He didn't "close the deal"?Trump talked with a few GOP opponents — including senators Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, and Rand Paul — but failed to sway them.
Nobody is happier than me to have Mitch McConnell "infuriated", and if the GOP hasn't figured out Trump by now, they deserve to lose.Some Senate Republicans complained that Trump was actually hindering the process. [...] After Republican Senator Dean Heller announced his opposition to the bill on Friday, pro-Trump super-pac America First Policies began running TV and radio ads attacking him. According to Politico the move, which was sanctioned by the White House, infuriated McConnell, as it made it harder to get Heller’s support.
Why didn't Magic Mitch call tRump directly and tell him that?The Times reports that McConnell called White House chief of staff Reince Priebus and complained that the anti-Heller campaign was “beyond stupid.”
There is no defense for Trump. I have no doubt he was more than happy to capitulate.Several senators, including Heller himself, complained about the ads during Tuesday’s meeting with Trump, and America First Policies announced they were pulling them a short time later.
[...]
In Trump’s defense, McConnell crafted the Senate bill in secret, and reportedly told the White House that it should leave everything to him.
The Rump is not gonna want to hear that. The Senate is a bunch of tough nuts. And I do mean nuts.Trump may have sway over members of the House, but as the Washington Post reports, senators are generally more independent and are much less afraid of Trump.
So far, he's shown he doesn't understand much of anything.It’s crazy that the president doesn’t seem fully aware of how his party intends to deliver one of his top campaign promises, but it’s probably a smart move. So far he’s shown he doesn’t understand how to sway senators, and might publicly criticize the bill if he finds out what’s in it.
...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.
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