House Republicans are living in an alternate reality where Donald Trump isn’t president
WASHINGTON—Hate crimes are up, President-elect Donald Trump spent his weekend tweeting a baseless claim about illegal votes and his ambition to jail flag-burners, and white nationalists are openly celebrating the incoming administration, but House Republicans are feeling pretty good about where the country is at right now.
Or at least that was the message projected on Tuesday morning by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy. “For everything that was said about this election, I don’t care what side you were on, you should feel good about the country,” the Republican from California told James Hohmann of The Washington Post. “The pundits were wrong, everybody else. So what does that tell you? Nobody controls this government but the people.”
The event itself was billed as a preview of the Republican agenda under Trump, but the Republican agenda has been remarkably consistent for the last eight years, so there wasn’t much new to preview. Instead, the conversation about legislative priorities and the state of the nation appeared to take place in an alternate universe in which the incoming president wasn’t the same guy insisting on the illegitimacy of the American electoral system and inviting his kids to sit in on meetings with foreign heads of state.
McCarthy, like a majority of his Republican colleagues in the House, is bullish on repealing the Affordable Care Act, as evidenced by the fact that his party has attempted to repeal the healthcare law more than 60 times since it was first signed into law in 2012. Ditto for sweeping tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit wealthy Americans and large corporations and the rollback of regulations on everything from financial transactions on Wall Street to environmental standards.
Many of these efforts, particularly around healthcare, have failed in the past, but McCarthy is optimistic that will change soon: “We’ve got to get work being done, and we can’t waste any of the weeks [ahead].”
So what does that agenda mean for the people who McCarthy thinks should feel good about the country?