Elated congressional Republicans pledged swift
action Wednesday on President-elect Donald Trump's agenda as they heralded an
extraordinary new era of unified GOP control in Washington.
"He just earned a mandate," House Speaker Paul
Ryan of Wisconsin declared of Trump. "We are going to hit the ground
running."
Said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky:
"We would like to see the country go in a different direction and intend
to work with him to change the course for America."
Republicans saw their majorities in the House and Senate
reduced, but not by much, as Democrats' hopes of retaking Senate control
vanished. And though Ryan and McConnell both had well-publicized reservations
about Trump, both were quick to declare that the newly elected president
deserved the credit.
"Donald Trump pulled off an amazing political feat. He
deserves tremendous credit for that," said Ryan, who initially refused to
endorse Trump and only last month declared he'd no longer defend him. "It
helped us keep our majorities, but it also showed the country that people don't
like the direction we were going."
First up would be repealing President Barack Obama's health
care law, something Republicans have already shown they can get through
Congress with just a narrow Senate majority. What they haven't done is unite
around a plan for ensuring that the 20 million who achieved health care
coverage under the landmark law don't lose it.
Republicans also celebrated the opportunity to fill the
existing Supreme Court vacancy, and potentially more to come, with
"constitutional conservatives." McConnell was being widely praised
for his strategy, once seen as risky, of refusing to act on Obama's nominee to
replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died last February.
And Republicans pledged to try to unwind any number of
executive moves by Obama, including tougher clean air rules on power plants,
looser restrictions on travel to Cuba, and tougher rules on sleep for long-haul
truckers, among others — "Every single one that's sucking the very life
out of our economy," GOP Sen. David Perdue of Georgia said in an
interview.
That threatened to wipe away key areas of progress
highlighted by Democrats under the Obama administration.
Some of Trump's goals could be harder to achieve. A wall on
the southern border is estimated to cost $10 billion to $20 billion, money that
Congress may be unlikely to provide given that cooperation from Democrats would
be necessary.
Indeed the Senate Democratic minority stood as the only
legislative barrier to Trump's goals, since 60 votes are required for most
consequential moves in the Senate.
Republicans were poised to end up with 52 Senate seats after
Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., conceded to Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan in their
close race. That assumes the GOP wins a December runoff in Louisiana, as
expected. Democrats managed to pick up only one other GOP-held Senate seat, in
Illinois, a devastating outcome for a party that went into Election Day with
high hopes of holding the White House and winning back Senate control.
In the House, Republicans were on track to lose a maximum of
nine seats, an unexpectedly modest reduction to a wide GOP majority that now
stands at 247-188, including three vacant seats.
"We kicked their tails last night," said GOP Rep.
Greg Walden of Oregon, head of the Republicans' House campaign committee.
Trump's extraordinary win appeared to be going far to heal
divisions within the GOP, as even Republicans who'd long harbored doubts about him
offered warm pledges of support.
Here and there, notes of caution were sounded, as a few
Republicans made clear that Congress would be asserting its constitutional
prerogatives as a check and balance on the executive, following what
Republicans viewed as overly expansive use of executive power by Obama.
"It's just our constitutional duty to keep the
executive branch in check," GOP Rep. Todd Young, the newly elected
Republican senator in Indiana, told reporters in Indianapolis.
Yet McConnell appeared to invite executive action by Trump,
suggesting he should be exploring what kinds of "unilateral action"
he could take — to undo unilateral actions by Obama.
Mr Kehinde Oladele sends this piece from the US.
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