Threat of impeachment takes oxygen out of 2019 agenda

House investigations of the Trump administration and the prospect of impeachment are crowding out hopes for legislative progress on Capitol Hill, creating a poisonous atmosphere that makes it all but impossible for the White House and Democrats to work together.

Senators in both parties didn’t expect much legislation to move this year, but they still reacted with dismay to the latest blowup between President Trump and Democrats, saying it jeopardizes efforts to find common ground on even basic issues of governance.

{mosads}Trump surprised Democratic leaders Wednesday when he turned a meeting that was supposed to be about finding ways to pay for a major infrastructure package into a stern three-minute speech on how the House investigations make it impossible to pass legislation.

“It was a monologue by the president, who wheeled around and walked out,” said Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.), who described the scene in the room, and said Senate Democratic Leader Charles Schumer (N.Y.) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) didn’t have a chance to say anything in response.

Many congressional Democrats have said this year they can walk and chew gum — meaning conducting oversight while moving agenda items. Trump made it clear Wednesday he’s not on board with that plan.

Legislative activity often slows in the second half of an election year, but it surprised lawmakers that the political posturing has gotten so intense in the off year.

“There are some things to be done that need to be done,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said.

Graham added that Democratic investigations in the House have “gone way overboard” but warned his fellow Republicans, “the answer for us is not to give up on governing.”

{mossecondads}Trump’s brief speech appeared to have been set off by Pelosi’s accusation earlier Wednesday that he was guilty of a “cover-up.”

“I don’t do cover-ups,” Trump said.

“I think a lot of it is Pelosi’s caucus. I think she’s under so much pressure there,” said Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.), who speculated she attacked Trump to appease House liberals who are pressing for impeachment. “That’s blowing things up. Around here, that’s kind of like dropping the nuclear bomb, to come out and accuse somebody of committing a crime and not having anything to back it up.”

But Sen. Doug Jones (Ala.), a centrist Democrat who faces a tough election next year, said he hopes tensions between the White House and the House will subside.

“Hopefully that will settle down. People are doing oversight,” he said. “As long as it’s oversight, no one should threaten to hold up anything when you do your constitutional duty of oversight.”

The prospect of a grand bargain on infrastructure, one of the few issues Trump and Democratic leaders saw as a promising opportunity for bipartisanship after the 2016 election, now appears all but dead.

And an agreement on setting spending caps for fiscal 2020 and fiscal 2021 and raising the debt ceiling beyond the next election now faces fresh uncertainty. 

Legislation to address the immigration crisis at the border, implement the USMCA trade deal — which would replace NAFTA — and fix the 2017 tax-reform law also appear stuck.

The prospect of the legislative process shutting down only five months into the 116th Congress is alarming lawmakers in both parties.

It’s a striking difference compared to 1998 and 1999, when then-President Clinton still worked with GOP leaders on legislation, even after they impeached him.

Former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said, “I voted for the articles of impeachment. That was on a Friday. On the following Thursday Clinton called me about some inconsequential bill, wanted to know if we could move it along. Never mentioned the impeachment trial.”

“We went on about our business,” Lott added.

Graham urged Trump via Twitter on Wednesday not to abandon infrastructure, immigration and prescription drug reform.

“My advice to the President is to try to find solutions to problems like infrastructure, prescription drugs, and a broken immigration system,” Graham tweeted. “See if we can do two things at once — fight with each other and find common ground.”

But after Wednesday’s setback, lawmakers say the prospect of passing an infrastructure bill before next year’s election is slim.

Congress is likely to focus instead on moving a reauthorization of the Highway Trust Fund later this year.

Asked about reaching a broader infrastructure deal, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said, “I don’t know how you can fund it.”

The Senate has spent almost all its time in recent weeks cranking through Trump’s executive branch and judicial nominees. The chamber has held only one legislative vote in May: a failed attempt to override Trump’s veto of a resolution directing the removal of U.S. troops from the civil war in Yemen.

Before that May 2 vote, the last time the Senate voted on legislation was April 1, when lawmakers voted to reject two competing disaster relief proposals.

“We have completed almost 25 percent of the time allotted to this current Congress, and what have we done? Other than nominations, which are important …. We have done nothing. Zero. Zilch. Nada,” Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said on the Senate floor Wednesday.

Other Senate GOP lawmakers say Pelosi and other Democrats seem more interested in investigating the president than passing bills that can actually get his signature to become law.

“Democrats in the House haven’t proved they want to legislate on anything yet,” said Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.).

But Democrats counter that Pelosi has passed many bills that are languishing in the Senate: a package of campaign fundraising, ethics and election reform provisions known as H.R. 1; expanded background checks for gun sales; the Paycheck Fairness Act; and a net neutrality bill.

Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) noted that Trump’s threat comes at a time when the Senate is hardly bringing any bills to the floor.

“McConnell isn’t doing any legislative activity, so what’s the threat?” he said, referring to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). “McConnell ain’t doing shit on the floor so we’re not going to do legislative activity.”

“We got a bigger problem that sits in an office over there,” he said, while walking through the Ohio Clock Corridor near McConnell’s office, which has control over the Senate schedule.

Tags Chuck Grassley Chuck Schumer Dick Durbin Donald Trump doug jones John Kennedy John Thune Jon Tester Lindsey Graham Mitch McConnell Nancy Pelosi

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