Negotiation with the Freedom Caucus: Trump Didn’t Care about Congressmen’s Issues

Tim Alberta offered a vivid anecdote:

Thursday afternoon, members of the House Freedom Caucus were peppering the president with wonkish concerns about the American Health Care Act—the language that would leave Obamacare’s “essential health benefits” in place, the community rating provision that limited what insurers could charge certain patients, and whether the next two steps of Speaker Paul Ryan’s master plan were even feasible—when Trump decided to cut them off.

“Forget about the little s***,” Trump said, according to multiple sources in the room. “Let’s focus on the big picture here.”

The group of roughly 30 House conservatives, gathered around a mammoth, oval-shaped conference table in the Cabinet Room of the White House, exchanged disapproving looks. Trump wanted to emphasize the political ramifications of the bill’s defeat; specifically, he said, it would derail his first-term agenda and imperil his prospects for reelection in 2020. The lawmakers nodded and said they understood. And yet they were disturbed by his dismissiveness. For many of the members, the “little s***” meant the policy details that could make or break their support for the bill—and have far-reaching implications for their constituents and the country.

Maybe to Trump these details about the bill were “the little s***.” But to the members in front of him, this was the make-or-break criteria of what makes a good reform bill. You would think the author of The Art of the Deal would have understood the importance of knowing the other side’s priorities. I seem to recall impassioned, insistent assurances during the 2016 Republican presidential primary that Trump was the ultimate dealmaker.

Why Republicans failed to repeal Obamacare

How did Republicans fail to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act?

They hated Obamacare but they never understood the Affordable Care Act.

It certainly (and this turned out to be very important) didn’t mean you had any ideas about what it did, how it worked or how many people were benefiting from it … or how to replace it.

— Obamacare created a new baseline. 

— They don’t have a policy bench.

tend be much more skilled at campaigning .. than at the qualities that enable governing, like compromise and fact-based analysis.

— The one policy Republicans get is tax cuts, and little else motivates/interests them.

almost 50 percent of the cuts went to millionaire households. The 400 richest taxpayers, with average income above $300 million, would get a tax break averaging $7 million.

.. the extent of this Robin-Hood-in-reverse play was too much for moderate Republicans

— They’re ungovernable

John A. Boehner predicted what just happened a few weeks ago.

.. “In the 25 years I served in the United States Congress, Republicans never, ever, one time, agreed on what a health-care proposal should look like. Not once.”

.. People are learning his “art-of-the-deal” shtick, so they know that what he says Monday may well be totally different from where he is Tuesday.

.. Newt Gingrich, of all people, was compelled to tweet out the following: “Why would you schedule a vote on a bill that is at 17 percent approval? Have we forgotten everything Reagan taught us?”

‘The closer’? The inside story of how Trump tried — and failed — to make a deal on health care

Shortly after House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) unveiled the Republican health-care plan on March 6, President Trump sat in the Oval Office and queried his advisers: “Is this really a good bill?”

.. “Is this really a good bill?”

In the end, the answer was no — in part because the president himself seemed to doubt it.

.. The bill itself would have violated a number of Trump’s campaign promises, driving up premiums for millions of citizens and throwing millions more off health insurance — including many of the working-class voters who gravitated to his call to “make America great again.”

.. He did not speak fluently about the bill’s details and focused his pitch in purely transactional terms. And he failed to appreciate the importance of replacing Obamacare to the Republican base

for the president, it was an obstacle to move past to get to taxes, trade and the rest of his agenda.

 .. As president, he was selling the rare product on which he refused to emblazon his name — devoting himself to an issue for which he has little real passion
.. Alluding to the long-running dramas on Capitol Hill, Trump added, “There are years of problems, great hatred and distrust, and, you know, I came into the middle of it.”

.. the president dialed Rep. Joe Barton, a wavering Republican from Texas

.. His senior aides described him as “an extremely good listener” and said his negotiating skills were the product of “total natural talent,” saying he could turn up the heat or the charm as needed.

.. found himself caught in the middle of factional House GOP dramas that have been simmering for years. As one member of the House Freedom Caucus described it: “We’re competing with Ryan. We like Trump.”

.. his thinking was straight from “The Art of the Deal”: If the White House continued to postpone the vote, the holdouts would gain leverage and learn the dangerous lesson that they could challenge Trump and win. Lawmakers wanting to oppose the president would have to do so publicly, in a vote, and face the consequences.

.. news Trump announced in a phone call with The Post, before Ryan even had time to personally brief GOP members.

.. Meadows said his mantra in negotiating with Trump had been, “If this was about personalities, we’d already be at ‘yes.’ He’s charming, and anyone who spends time with him knows that. But this is about policy, and we’re not going to make it about anything else.”

.. For Meadows, a sticking point was essential health-benefit requirements under the current law for insurance companies, such as maternity and newborn care, and substance-abuse treatment, which he wanted removed

.. moderate Republicans, known as the Tuesday Group, stood opposed to the bill

.. described it as “a ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit,” with the president boasting about how “great” the bill was and his aides seconding his assessment “like a Greek chorus.”

.. which he likened to an act of betrayal

Byron York: 14 lessons from the GOP Obamacare debacle

1) Don’t over-promise

2) Jobs, jobs, jobs: Trump won the presidency on a pledge to create more and better-paying jobs. Taking up Obamacare as the first legislative project of his presidency was not consistent with that pledge

3) Find more votes.

4) Start with giveaways .. an infrastructure bill first, the story from Capitol Hill would have been a president and Congress giving things to the American people

5) ‘The Art of the Deal’ doesn’t work with ideologically-driven politicians

If the president wants to succeed in Washington, he’ll have to learn how to deal with people who aren’t in it just for the money.

6) Trump made a “rookie’s error” in bringing the Obamacare measure to a finale too quickly.

7) Trump and the House Republicans have different priorities and agendas.

8) John Boehner was right about the House Freedom Caucus. In an appearance last month, the former Speaker laughed at the notion that Republicans could agree on an Obamacare replacement.

9) Keep it simple. : It all got way too complicated to benefit from Trump’s talents as a simplifier and a salesman.

10) For years, House Republicans were able to pass bills like repealing Obamacare with the assurance that they didn’t really mean anything .. “We were a 10-year opposition party where being against things was the easy thing to do,” the Speaker said.

11) On big-ticket items, the president leads Congress, not the other way around.

12) while there is still intense opposition to the healthcare law inside the GOP, it has not stayed at that 2009-2010 level. In retrospect, Republicans were maddest at Obamacare before it actually went into effect

13) CBO estimates matter.