But
on Tuesday the program again went off course, as the Republican nominee
seemed to upend a fragile GOP détente by revealing he would not endorse
Ryan -- or Arizona Sen. John McCain -- in their coming primary
contests.
Now,
a little more than three months from Election Day, the two heaviest
hitters in the Republican Party are at another crossroads.
Here's a look back at their long, strange trip.
Ryan and Scott Walker
Months
before Trump descended his gilded escalator into the primary muck, Ryan
was talking up his fellow Wisconsinite, Gov. Scott Walker, as an early
favorite to win the 2016 nomination.
"Scott's a good friend of mine,"
Ryan said. "I think he's got a really good chance and I look forward to seeing how it goes for him."
It didn't go far. Like so many other would-be Republican contenders, Walker's campaign was quickly derailed by the Trump train.
Walker left the race in September 2015 with
this message:
"I encourage other Republican presidential candidates to consider doing
the same so that the voters can focus on a limited number of candidates
who can offer a positive, conservative alternative to the current
front-runner" -- a reference to Trump.
The Muslim ban and David Duke
On
December 7, just hours after a poll showed Ted Cruz leap-frogging Trump
in Iowa, the businessman put out a surprise statement "calling for a
total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until
our country's representatives can figure out what is going on."
Ryan
condemned the proposal less than 24 hours later during a news conference on Capitol Hill.
"This
is not conservatism," he said. "Some of our best and biggest allies in
this struggle and fight against radical Islam terror are Muslims."
The criticism did little to hurt Trump with voters.
And in late February, days before Super Tuesday, he again raised eyebrows by
refusing to disavow former KKK leader David Duke during a Sunday interview with Tapper.
That Tuesday -- primary day -- Ryan brushed back Trump again,
saying:
"If a person wants to be the nominee of the Republican Party, there can
be no evasion and no games. They must reject any group or cause that is
built on bigotry."
"I hope," he added, "this is the last time I need to speak out on this race."
Ryan's speech
Three
weeks later, on the day after Trump scored a major winner-take-all
victory in Arizona, Ryan delivered what his office called a speech "on
the state of American politics."
Ryan's remarks were mostly read as a thinly veiled
rebuke of Trump.
"Looking around at what's taking place in politics today, it is easy to get disheartened,"
he said. "How many of you find yourself just shaking your head at what you see from both sides?"
The Wisconsin primary was less than two weeks away.
Trump goes to Wisconsin
The
front-runner landed in the Badger State and immediately proceeded to
rip Walker, still popular there despite his weak turn on the national
stage -- and a Ryan ally.
"Your
governor came out, he was expected to win and we sent him packing like a
little boy," Trump said during an interview with radio host
Michael Koolidge, after Walker backed his rival, Ted Cruz.
Trump
kept up the attacks on Walker during a campaign stop in Janesville,
Ryan's hometown -- a decision one Republican strategist in the state
told CNN was like "(poking) Ryan in the eye."
'I'm not there right now'
So
it came as little surprise when, one month after the primary (which
Cruz won), Ryan now famously declared he was not prepared to endorse
Trump.
"I'm not there right now and I hope to though and I want to,"
he told Tapper.
"But I think what is required is that we unify this party. I think the
bulk of the burden on unifying the party will have to come from the
presumptive nominee."
Trump
responded to the challenge later in the day by putting out a press
release saying: "I am not ready to support Speaker Ryan's agenda.
Perhaps in the future we can work together and come to an agreement
about what is best for the American people. They have been treated so
badly for so long that it is about time for politicians to put them
first!"
That was Thursday. On
Friday, Trump continued, then on Twitter: "So many great endorsements
yesterday, except for Paul Ryan! We must put America first and MAKE
AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"
Less than two hours later,
he tweeted: "Paul Ryan said that I inherited something very special, the
Republican Party. Wrong, I didn't inherit it, I won it with millions of
voters!"
At around the same time, Trump spokeswoman Katrina Pierson questioned
during an interview on CNN's "New Day" whether Ryan should remain as speaker if he could not come around to the future nominee.
"No,
because this is about the party," she said, ripping into the GOP
establishment. "The issue here isn't about Donald Trump -- if you can't
hold yourself to the standard you hold everyone else to, the problem is
with you."
They meet!
With
Trump now the presumptive nominee and Ryan still withholding his
support, a summit was arranged as efforts to unify the GOP ahead of the
coming general election campaign became increasingly desperate.
The
sit-down yielded a joint statement promising "additional discussions"
and an assurance that both sides were "totally committed to working
together" in their shared desire to defeat Hillary Clinton.
"Great
day in D.C. with @SpeakerRyan and Republican leadership," Trump tweeted
on his way out of town. "Things working out really well!"
Ryan endorses Trump
Three weeks later, on June 2, Ryan finally delivered a measured endorsement of Trump.
Writing in Wisconsin's
Janesville Gazette, the speaker said he believed that the presumptive nominee would buy-in to the House GOP agenda.
"I
feel confident he would help us turn the ideas in this agenda into laws
to help improve people's lives," Ryan wrote. "That's why I'll be voting
for him this fall."
Trump, of course, was delighted.
"So
great to have the endorsement and support of Paul Ryan," he tweeted.
"We will both be working very hard to Make America Great Again!"
Ryan denounces Trump (again, then again)
Any
notion that Ryan's endorsement would tamp down Trump's rhetoric proved
to be terribly mistaken. In the subsequent days, Trump launched a series
of racially charged attacks on US District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel,
saying he could not fairly oversee a lawsuit related to Trump University
because of his Mexican-American heritage.
Ryan
called it "the textbook definition of a racist comment" and "absolutely unacceptable."
On
June 14, less than two weeks after announcing his endorsement, Ryan was
confronted with Trump's renewed push, following the massacre at a gay
nightclub in Orlando that weekend, for a halt on Muslim immigration into
the US.
"I do not think a Muslim ban is in our country's interest,"
Ryan said. "It's not reflective of our principles not just as a party but as a country."
It's a theme he returned to this past weekend, as
Trump feuded with the family of a Muslim-American soldier killed by a suicide bomber in Baghdad in 2004.
"(Capt. Khan's) sacrifice -- and that of Khizr and Ghazala Khan -- should always be honored. Period," Ryan said in a statement.
Trump's revenge
Trump took heavier hits than delivered by Ryan, but on Tuesday -- a day after praising the speaker's primary opponent
in a tweet --
the Republican Party's presidential nominee dashed any suggestion of
GOP unity by refusing to offer his support to Ryan or McCain in their
primary races.
And just in case the
message was not clear, Trump even called back on Ryan's own words,
saying that when it came to an endorsement: "I'm not quite there yet."
No comments:
Post a Comment