[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
politics and politicians Title: Freedom Caucus Isn’t Backing Down After Trump Threat If President Donald Trumps intention was to intimidate House Freedom Caucus members with his assertion on Twitter that we must fight them in 2018, it didnt work. If somebody can get to the right of me in the primary, God bless him, Freedom Caucus member Trent Franks said. The Arizona Republican, who had learned about the presidents tweet from a reporter Thursday morning, provided a blunt response that captures the gist of the Freedom Caucus reaction to the threat, although several members didnt go as far as Franks in stating their thoughts. But the sentiment is generally shared among Freedom Caucus members, who see themselves as true conservatives and find the idea of drawing challengers further to the right as laughable. I dont know of too many people who can challenge me from the right, Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows told reporters last week after Trump visited the GOP conference and suggested members who opposed the bill could face primary challenges though he did not directly threaten members during that meeting, several attendees said. But on Thursday, the president tweeted that the caucus will hurt the entire Republican agenda if they dont get on the team, & fast. We must fight them, & Dems, in 2018! That prompted Rep. Justin Amash, a Freedom Caucus member, to reply to Trump with his own tweet, saying that it didnt take long for the swamp to drain. No shame, Mr. President. Almost everyone succumbs to the D.C. establishment, the Michigan Republican tweeted. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters Thursday that he would let Trumps tweet speak for itself. But he also said the president and his team will get the votes from wherever he can to pass legislation to enact his agenda. Spicer also indicated that some Freedom Caucus members have let the White House know they are willing to work directly with the president. There are some promising signs on that, he added. Trumps top spokesman also challenged members of the hard-line conservative group to act in their constituents best interests rather than continue insisting in voting as a bloc. And he urged the caucus to avoid, while negotiating legislation, letting the perfect become the enemy of the good. Asked to respond to Amashs tweet, Spicer said Trump was not attempting to bully caucus members. The tweet is consistent with the presidents message about the health care bills failure since it was pulled last Friday, Spicer said, reiterating that Trump is seeking Republicans and Democrats to pass a bill that aligns with his goals. While Trump did not elaborate on how he would fight the Freedom Caucus next year, his talk of them needing to get on the team suggests the Republican establishment would look to back and potentially recruit primary challengers to run against caucus members who opposed the health care bill. To that end, the leadership-backed American Action Network ran ads in caucus members districts urging them to vote for the GOP leaderships bill, known as the American Health Care Act, to partially repeal and replace the 2010 health care law. Freedom Caucus members spoke openly about the network starting a campaign to get people to call their offices in support of the legislation, but they noted that the groups plan backfired as the vast majority of calls they received were from people urging them to vote no. The idea of establishment-backed candidates unseating a Freedom Caucus member is not unheard of it happened to Tim Huelskamp in Kansas 1st District last cycle. But most Freedom Caucus members dont see that as much of a threat. In my district, were very conservative, so if he gets me out office, hes going to get someone more conservative than me, Tennessee Rep. Scott DesJarlais said. However, DesJarlais said he has a good relationship with the president he was one of the few members who endorsed Trump during the presidential primaries and he does not believe Trump will follow through on the threat. Nor does DesJarlais believe the tweet indicates his relationship with the White House is suffering. My impression of the White House doesnt come from Trumps tweets, he said. He does that, I dont really pay much attention to it. The Freedom Caucus will likely have some cover from political groups, like Club for Growth and Heritage Action, that opposed the health care bill. We and the members of the House Freedom Caucus are the people who stood by President Trump in the fall, when many in the House GOP leadership abandoned him, the conservative Tea Party Patriots political action committee said in a statement. If President Trump wants to drain the swamp of Washington, DC, he should aim his frustration at those who have been in the swamp the longest, not the ones who are trying to change business as usual in DC. House Speaker Paul D. Ryan offered no defense for the Freedom Caucus when asked about Trumps tweet during his weekly news conference Thursday. I understand the presidents frustration. I share his frustration, the Wisconsin Republican said, noting that only 10 percent of the GOP conference opposes the health care bill. Ryan suggested but did not say directly that those 24 members were from the Freedom Caucus. While that figure roughly matched the number of conservatives planning to vote no on the health care bill, there were also a significant number of moderate members who had publicly stated they would oppose the measure. GOP leadership and its allies say that most of the moderates were willing to vote yes on the floor if it meant the bill would pass, but theres no way to verify those claims absent a vote. Freedom Caucus member Mark Sanford cited former House speaker and Trump ally New Gingrich who said the bloc of opposition, which he estimated was about equally split between Freedom Caucus members and moderates, may have saved Republicans from calamity in next years midterms. You have a bill that 17 percent of the American public has embraced, the South Carolina Republican said. You have a bill that would cast 14 million people off the rolls [by 2018] and 24 million people off the rolls in the next 10 years. Not surprisingly, theres some resistance to it. So I think this is a case of lets be careful about shooting the messenger here. Sanford, who served as South Carolinas governor for eight years, said Trumps tweet was counterproductive toward getting Freedom Caucus members on board with the bill. As a former chief executive, I always found that carrots were much more effective in the implementation of legislation, he said, invoking the metaphor of the carrot versus the stick. In the week since the bills failure, Freedom Caucus members have publicly stated their desire to continue working on improvements to the bill that would get them to a yes. Virginia Rep. Dave Brat said that message seemingly hasnt reached the president. Whoever is in the presidents ear isnt giving him the full story on what were trying to achieve, he said. What hes probably not being told is we were that close to yes, he added. We have to lower the price of health care. Thats it, thats the bottom line. Were OK and weve been very clear were OK on pre-existing conditions, $100 billion for high-risk pools back home. Were even OK, even though we dont like it, having this huge new federal structure.
Weve negotiated and come way over here. Brat said the Freedom Caucus is still in range of getting to yes and is negotiating with moderates to find a solution both sides can accept. Another thing the presidents counsel apparently is not communicating to him is Senate leaders saying that they are not going to use reconciliation to repeal the current law, Brat said. If he hears that, I think hes going to align the eye over on that body way more than on us, who fought for him the whole way through, the Virginia lawmaker said. Franks also defended the Freedom Caucus position, saying it wanted just one thing for Republicans to keep their promise to repeal and replace the 2010 health care law But he didnt point any blame at Trump. I think Congress failed the president rather than the other way around and I can understand his frustration, he said. DesJarlais, however, said the Freedom Caucus is going to keep doing what its doing because members all believe in the conservative values theyre trying to represent. As far as Trumps urge for them to get on the team, DesJarlais said, Were elected as Republicans to put forth good conservative policy, and Im on board as soon as we start doing that. Poster Comment: I tossed in a few Wiki pictures of the congresscritters, some of whom aren't all that well-known nationally. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Anybody else remember the good old days,back when the people calling themselves "conservatives" today used to brag about being "moderates",and people who were actual conservatives were called "right-wingers"? BOYCOTT PAYPAL AND CLOSE YOUR PP ACCOUNTS NOW! ENCOURAGE OTHERS TO DO SO,TOO! ISLAM MEANS SUBMISSION! Why is democracy held in such high esteem when it’s the enemy of the minority and makes all rights relative to the dictates of the majority? (Ron Paul,2012) American Indians had open borders. Look at how well that worked out for them.
You mean like the Goldwater and Nixon era? I recall Nixon but didn't pay much attention. I thought he was funny looking but not obnoxious on TV like LBJ was. In the Nixon era, Republicans would proudly call themselves liberal. That was before Reagan. RINOs like Mitch McConnell were proud to be liberal Republicans and not shy about criticizing Reagan, at least in his early years. They were all Bush supporters or John Anderson fellow-travelers. A different era. Young people today can't picture it. Some of these things, you just gotta be there or you don't quite get it, no matter how much you try to study it.
|
||
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|