Three times on Tuesday
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell was asked about
Donald Trump Jr.’s attempt during the campaign to collect damaging information about Democrat
Hillary Clinton from Russia.
And
three times the Republican leader swatted back the inquiries, bluntly
saying he would rely on the investigations already underway into the
Trump administration’s Russia ties and make no further comment.
The
back and forth was a well-worn script that continues to play out on
Capitol Hill amid the almost daily drip-drip-drip of new details about
possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia in the 2016
election.
Republicans
may privately grumble about the president — and many do — but they have
been reluctant to publicly criticize President Trump and risk the wrath
of his Twitter assaults, from which they have little political cover.
“My guess is they’ll continue to stick by him,” said Matt
Mackowiak, a Republican strategist based in Texas. “There’s a real sense
of, ‘Let’s make the most of what we have.’”
Mackowiak added, “No one wants to be the first Republican to step out and distance themselves.”
The political calculation is clear, given that Republicans control the House, Senate and the
White House, and as lawmakers face the 2018 midterm election.
Their
constituents in red states and conservative House districts still
largely back the president, and to break with the White House would
invite criticism and could cost them votes.
Even
if Republican lawmakers mustered the courage to buck Trump — on the
Russia inquiry or on other issues like healthcare or tax reform where
they part ways with him — they would then face pressure to do something
about it.
Few senators or representatives are willing to be the
army of one leading calls for investigations beyond those already
underway. Most are still hopeful they can plug away at their legislative
agendas and tally some accomplishments for reelection.
And so
week by week, Republicans either brush past reporters or simply shrug
and say they don’t have much to offer on the latest swirling
developments in the Russia investigation.
Most stick with the line often used by McConnell or House Speaker
Paul D. Ryan,
which is that they are relying on the inquiries underway by special
counsel Robert S. Mueller III and the House and Senate intelligence
committees to resolve the matter.
“I’m sure they’ll get to the bottom of whatever may have happened,” McConnell said Tuesday.
Ryan
has not publicly addressed the meeting between Trump’s son and a
Russian lawyer, nor did his office respond to a request Tuesday for
comment.
Republicans in
Congress
face their own problems. Lawmakers are so worried about heading home
for August recess with few big accomplishments that some asked leaders
to cancel the monthlong summer recess. McConnell agreed Tuesday and
announced the Senate would stay in session for part of the month.
Senators are struggling to fulfill their promise to repeal and replace the
Affordable Care Act, also called Obamacare, and appear no closer to having the support needed from at least 50 senators ahead of next week’s vote.
They
have made little tangible progress on other big-ticket campaign items,
including tax reform, and they are arguing among themselves over the
budget.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) conceded Tuesday that concerns over Russia “may be legitimate,” but he said it was “not in our lanes.”
“It
has nothing to do with what we need to get done in August,” he said.
“That’s the very thing we need to not get distracted by.”
Lawmakers
said Tuesday that Trump voters back home seem more concerned about
healthcare or easing what businesses see as excessive government
regulation.
Sen. David Purdue (R-Ga.) wouldn’t go so far as to
dismiss the latest revelations as a “nothing burger,” as some have
called it, but “it looks like to me that not a lot happened in the
meeting that was pertinent.”
Besides, he said, consumer confidence was at a 13-year high, and “consumers are a good gauge of what’s happening.”
“We’ve
got a new president’s been in office six months,” he added. “The first
six months of every president, I go back and look, have not been exactly
smooth.”
A few key Republicans, including Sens.
John McCain (R-Ariz.) and
Lindsey Graham
(R-S.C.), along with others in the House, have raised more public
concerns over the Russia questions and pressed for deeper investigations
into the links between Trump’s campaign and President Vladimir Putin’s
government.
Graham told reporters that if candidates get an offer from a foreign government for help on their campaigns, “the answer is no.”
Donald
Trump Jr. “definitely” has to testify before investigators, Graham
said. “That email is disturbing,” he said. “On its face this is very
problematic.”
But such voices remain outliers in the Republican
Party, and Democrats have piled on criticism, deriding Republicans for
failing to confront Trump over what many Democrats view as a serious
threat to the U.S. government and American democracy.
“Has any elected Republican said anything brave today? Oh, never mind,” Sen.
Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) said in a Twitter message.
Sen.
Tim Kaine (D-Va.) suggested treason may have been committed.
Asked whether the latest Russia developments concerned him, Sen.
(R-Tenn.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said simply, “Nah.”
Corker
was at the doctor’s office Tuesday waiting for a checkup when he saw a
TV report about the issue. He said he found it hard to get worked up
about it.
“I don’t know, it’s kind of losing focus,” Corker said.
“I’m focused on other things — the Russia sanctions, healthcare and
other kinds of things, and relying on the Intelligence Committee to do
their work in a good way.”
Mackowiak said the problem for
Republicans, and those who want Republicans to stand up to Trump, was
that the Russia investigation would not likely be resolved any time
soon.
“People’s expectations that Republicans are going to start
calling for Trump’s impeachment,” he said, “that’s not going to happen.”
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