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Trump Scrambles For A Win — Any Win, Really — As He Nears 100 Days

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jwc2blue  •  7 years ago  •  15 comments

Trump Scrambles For A Win — Any Win, Really — As He Nears 100 Days

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-100-days_us_58fa778ae4b06b9cb916fbe0?gb&ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

 

 

 


He wants to show progress, but has painfully few ways to actually achieve it.


 

 

As President   Donald Trump   barrels toward his 100th day in office, the administration is returning to the primary ethos of his campaign: Just win.

Really, any win will do, as long as the veneer of progress comes with it. But the problem for Trump and congressional Republicans is that they’re still far off from “winning” on any number of legislative fronts. If anything, Trump’s desire to achieve a flurry of victories next week risks several high-profile setbacks.

The White House’s primary focus still appears to be the revival of health care reform discussions, with administration officials pushing forcefully for a vote on refined Obamacare repeal and replace language in the upcoming week. But House GOP aides, themselves highly eager to get something out of their chamber, acknowledged that they’re not yet at the point of whipping votes ― there isn’t even legislative text to consider.  

The White House continued to tout what it framed as solid progress, suggesting on Friday that Senate Republicans were also entertaining health care legislation. But Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who was rumored to be in discussions with House conservatives,   said no such talks had taken place , and a top Senate GOP aide threw cold water on the idea that they’d have their own bill.

“We’re not drafting anything,” the aide said. “We’re looking at and reviewing the language of the House bill, but nothing beyond that.”

As health care reform remained in limbo, Trump also announced he would drop a major tax reform plan next week, saying it would include “massive” cuts. But   as Reuters reported , “the news came as a surprise to lobbyists and congressional aides who had no idea what Trump’s announcement might include.” Indeed, few Republicans on the Hill expect tax reform to happen anytime soon, not only because it is predicated on health care’s passage but also because Trump has not embraced leadership’s border adjustment proposal Laura Litvan  

@LauraLitvan

SCOOP: Trump   # tax   plan likely will NOT include controversial border adjustment plan, senior official tells Bloomberg's @ JenniferJJacob

4:39 PM - 21 Apr 2017

 

 

Once hopeful for a bill being passed by August, Republicans now expect that action will take place well beyond then.

The one “accomplishment” that Trump and Congress actually need before the first 100 days ends is a government funding bill.  But even that feat may be more modest than Republicans had hoped. A senior GOP aide told The Huffington Post on Friday that the possibility that Congress would have to pass a short-term funding bill next week to extend current spending, instead of a larger omnibus bill that would fund new priorities, was “not insubstantial.”

Congress has already passed multiple continuing resolutions to extend a government funding deadline that first began in October. In December, Trump implored Republicans to pass another CR so they could write a more conservative funding bill. Another short-term funding bill would mean Congress still needs more time, even after these extensions.  And even if Republicans were able to get an omnibus spending bill done next week, it would likely include few  wins for Republicans .

The administration hopes to use the government funding bill to secure money for the president’s infamous border wall. Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney has offered Democrats $1 in disputed Obamacare subsidy funding for health insurance companies for every $1 in wall funding. But both Democratic and GOP aides told HuffPost this week that they expected money to go only toward border security and not physical wall construction. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s (D-N.Y.) office scoffed at Mulvaney’s offer.

“The White House gambit to hold hostage health care for millions of Americans, in order to force American taxpayers to foot the bill for a wall that the President said would be paid for by Mexico is a complete non-starter,” said Schumer’s spokesman, Matt House. “The U.S. government is supposed to take care of its citizens and, according to the President, Mexico is supposed to pay for the wall. If the administration would drop their 11 th   hour demand for a wall that Democrats, and a good number of Republicans oppose, Congressional leaders could quickly reach a deal.”

And so, the White House is staring down the possibility that it could hit the 100-day mark in the midst of a government shutdown — or, less severe, with few legislative accomplishments for the president to champion. Trump seemed to brush off the severity of the latter when he spoke to reporters on Friday afternoon.

“It doesn’t matter if it’s next week,” he said of health care. “Next week doesn’t matter.”

But it’s clear that the possibility of a bare legislative cupboard is bothering Trump.   He has bemoaned   the arbitrary nature of the 100-day mark and preemptively criticized the media for its coverage of it. And he’s continued spending copious amounts of time   holding public signing ceremonies   for executive orders.

Those orders, however, are largely if not wholly symbolic, often just directing federal agencies to review current practices and then eventually draft a memo to Trump recommending changes.

The “Buy American” order that Trump signed this week, for instance, directs federal agencies to evaluate the effectiveness of the government’s current efforts to favor U.S. firms in the procurement process ― in which the government spends hundreds of billions per year buying goods and services from private companies. Then, the agencies will make recommendations to the secretary of Commerce within 150 days, and the secretary will write a report for the president.

 


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Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     7 years ago

The first 100 days...No wins...SAD

 
 
 
Dean Moriarty
Professor Quiet
link   Dean Moriarty  replied to  Kavika   7 years ago

You must of missed it Gorsuch is in. 

 
 
 
Randy
Sophomore Participates
link   Randy  replied to  Kavika   7 years ago

The first 100 days...No wins...SAD

What worries me about his no wins in his first hundred days and going down in history as having the worst first hundred days of any person to sit in the Oval Office in modern history is that he may want a repeat of the thrill he got when he launched those Cruise Missiles at an empty air base in Syria, except that he may fire some of them at live people in North Korea or as a back up Iran and start a major war that didn't need to happen. His only option of calling any attention to himself in history beyond his current abject failure is an attempt to win a war. Any war. Anywhere. Against whoever happens to be the most hated at the time. If a war is needed or not. I worry that he will get a lot of our troops killed just to try to put one up in his supposed "win" column, when really all it would do is to make him no better then just another terrorist.

 
 
 
A. Macarthur
Professor Guide
link   A. Macarthur    7 years ago

Just to recap, this is Trump's record so far:

  • Muslim ban: Halted by the courts.
  • Trumpcare: Dead on arrival.
  • Tax reform: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
  • Approval rating: Worst ever .
  • FBI: Investigating Trump for colluding with a foreign power to steal an election.
 
 
 
Dean Moriarty
Professor Quiet
link   Dean Moriarty  replied to  A. Macarthur   7 years ago

And these.

  • An order and two memoranda empowering Treasury Secretary Mnuchin to move toward tax reform and end portions of the Dodd-Frank financial reform.

     

     

  • A memo ordering an investigation into whether  foreign steel  is hurting national security.

     

     

  • An order directing federal agencies to review the use of the H-1B visa program.

    Two orders on trade; one requesting the Commerce Dept. report on the factors behind the trade deficit and another seeking to increase collection of duties on imports.

  • An order establishing the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis. 

     

     

  • An order initiating a review of the Clean Power Plan, which restricted greenhouse gas emissions at coal-fired power plants.

     

     

  • An order revoking Obama-era executive orders on federal contracting.

     

     

  • An order directing a top-to-bottom audit of the Executive Branch.
     
  • A revised order suspending the refugee program and entry to the U.S. for travelers from several mostly Muslim countries, in response to objections from courts. As before, the order will suspend refugee entries for 120 days, but doesn't suspend Syrian refugees indefinitely and no longer includes Iraq in the named countries. In signing this order, the original one was revoked.

     

     

  • An order moving the HBCU (Historically Black College and Universities) offices back from the Department of Education to the White House.

     

     

  • An order requiring every agency to establish a Regulatory Reform Task Force to evaluate regulations and recommend rules for repeal or modification. 
  • Three orders establishing three Department of Justice task forces to fight drug cartels, reduce violent crime and reduce attacks against police.
     
  • An order directing the Treasury secretary to review the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulatory law.
  • A memorandum instructing the Labor Department to delay implementing an Obama rule requiring financial professionals who are giving advice on retirement, and who charge commissions, to put their client's interests first.
  • An order instructing agencies that whenever they introduce a regulation, they must first abolish two others.

     

     

  • A memorandum to restructure the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council.

     

     

  • A memorandum directing the Secretary of Defense to draw up a plan within 30 days to defeat ISIS.

     

     

  • An order to lengthen the ban on administration officials working as lobbyists. There is now a 5 year-ban on officials becoming lobbyists after they leave government, and a lifetime ban on White House officials lobbying on behalf of a foreign government.

     

     

  • An executive order imposing a 120-day suspension of the refugee program and a 90-day ban on travel to the U.S. from citizens of seven terror hot spots: Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Somalia and Sudan.

     

     

  • Two multi-pronged orders on border security and immigration enforcement including: the authorization of a U.S.-Mexico border wall; the stripping of federal grant money to sanctuary cities; hiring 5,000 more Border Patrol agents; ending “catch-and-release” policies for illegal immigrants; and reinstating local and state immigration enforcement
    partnerships.

     

     

  • A memorandum calling for a 30-day review of military readiness.

     

  • Two orders reviving the Keystone XL pipeline and Dakota Access piplines. He also signed three other related orders that would: expedite the environmental permitting process for infrastructure projects related to the pipelines; direct the Commerce Department to streamline the manufacturing permitting process; and give the Commerce Department 180 days to maximize the use of U.S. steel in
    the pipeline.

     

     

  • An order to reinstate the so-called "Mexico City Policy" – a ban on federal funds to international groups that perform abortions or lobby to legalize or promote abortion. The policy was instituted in 1984 by President Reagan, but has gone into and out of effect depending on the party in power in the White House.

     

     

  • A notice that the U.S. will begin withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal. Trump called the order "a great thing for the American worker.

     

     

  • An order imposing a hiring freeze for some federal government workers as a way to shrink the size of government. This excludes the military, as Trump noted at the signing.

     

     

  • An order that directs federal agencies to ease the “regulatory burdens” of ObamaCare. It orders agencies to “waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any provision or requirement” of ObamaCare that imposes a “fiscal burden on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden on individuals, families, healthcare providers, health insurers, patients, recipients of healthcare services, purchasers of health insurance, or makers of medical devices, products, or medications.”
 
 
 
A. Macarthur
Professor Guide
link   A. Macarthur  replied to  Dean Moriarty   7 years ago

Let me wish you to be the recipient of any/all resultant outcomes/phenomena/fallout/benefits? associated with the list you posted, Dean.

 
 

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