After swearing up and down that the Senate would vote on the Republicans' health-care reform bill giant tax cut for the wealthy before the 4th of July recess, Mitch McConnell glumly announced on Tuesday that he would, in fact, miss that deadline for want of the necessary number of votes. Less than 24 hours later, the Republican Party's blame game is already in full swing: According to The New York Times, the Senate majority leader has grown quite weary of dealing with a president who is this astonishingly bad at his job.
So far, the Republican senator who has voiced the most strenuous objections to the bill is Nevada's Dean Heller, who faces a 2018 reelection bid in a state that (1) depends heavily on Medicaid spending, which Trumpcare would slash; (2) that Hillary Clinton won in 2016; and (3) that just elected a Democrat to the Senate in 2016. Dean Heller is understandably shook, and late last week he announced that he would not support the proposal, even going so far as to say that it is a "lie" that the bill lowers premiums. What happened next? America First, a super-PAC with close ties to Trump, spent $1 million dollars in attack ads targeting Heller—which, if you're Mitch McConnell and you're working hard to try and cajole just a few more reluctant Republican senators into the YES column, is a decidedly unwelcome development!
America First pulled the ads later that same day, ostensibly because Heller agreed to attend a strategy meeting at the White House along with the rest of the Republican senators, and definitely not because Mitch McConnell and other grown-up politicians told Donald Trump that his people were fucking everything up in spectacular fashion.
It doesn't really come as a surprise that the president, a man who has spent his entire life trying to convince people that being born into money and attaching his name to a line of overpriced hotels somehow makes him a successful businessman, isn't particularly skilled at the finer points of intra-party negotiation. The more delicious aspect of this story, though, is the image of Mitch McConnell, widely regarded as a master strategist and legislative genius, watching all of his best-laid plans crushed into a fine powder by the lumbering oaf that is Donald Trump. McConnell made this bed, of course, but he probably didn't realize that it was going to become this uncomfortable this quickly.
Differences of opinion regarding the procedural aspects of passing Trumpcare, though, might be the least of McConnell's worries, since the longer this process drags on, the more apparent it becomes that Donald Trump hasn't the foggiest idea of what is actually in the bill that he so desperately wants credit for passing.
Since nothing that appears in the failing New York Times ever escapes his eye, the president fired back early this morning.
To recap: Mitch McConnell couldn't pass Trumpcare on time. One of the few people who might be persuaded to reconsider immediately got roasted by a president whose negotiating skill set begins and ends with "uncritical retribution." And now Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell are publicly sniping at each other as the Senate heads into an eleven-day break with the fate of its signature piece of legislation—the contents of which Trump may or may not understand—hanging in the balance. Happy Fourth of July, Mitch!