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Apr 1, 2016 17:02:42   #
Progressive One
 
New speaker, same old struggles

Ryan has been unable to beat conservative pushback that doomed Boehner.

BY LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON — When Rep. Paul D. Ryan took over as House speaker, it was supposed to signal a new era for Republicans — the arrival of a younger, more conservative visionary who scrubbed the cigarette smoke stains from outgoing Speaker John A. Boehner’s Capitol office and promised a fresh start.
Republicans craved the upbeat, button-down image Ryan offered. And his team served up the Ryan brand with marketing flourish — lofty speeches, a TV blitz and videos galore, including a cheeky snow-cam from the speaker’s balcony showing the winter blizzard over the National Mall.
But five months in, the Wisconsin Republican finds himself with a familiar problem. As Congress is careening toward another budget crisis and the party is ripping itself apart over Donald Trump’s rise, the man best known as the architect of the GOP’s austere spending blueprint is likely to miss an April 15 deadline to approve a new funding plan for 2017.
He’s been unable to overcome the same resistance from the conservative House Freedom Caucus that doomed his predecessor, and is so far similarly unwilling to use the power of the speaker’s office to force stragglers to fall into line.
On the top issue of the day, the turbulent p**********l race, Ryan has refused to wade into the muck, fearful of alienating House Republicans who back Trump, but also worried about tarnishing his own image in case the party needs his help at a brokered convention in July.
To some, Ryan’s repeated calls for Republicans to “raise our gaze” and his frequent attempts to position himself as the GOP’s deep thinker are starting to give off an air of ivory tower insignificance. Conservatives wonder whether he’s still a “young gun” trying to shake up the party.
At a Trump rally in Ryan’s Wisconsin hometown of Janesville last week, the crowd booed the mention of the speaker’s name.
“Now we understand why he didn’t want the job: Congress is broken and it’s hard for anybody to fix it,” said John Feehery, a former Republican aide and now a party strategist. “Jumping on the back of this tiger has not been easy.”
Allies see Ryan, who declined to be interviewed for this story, as a leader who is slowly and deliberately piecing back together a Republican Party that appears to have imploded during President Obama’s years in the White House.
In many ways, the speaker’s problems are of his own making, the result of a leadership strategy he helped forge: to recruit the most conservative candidates to run for office and then, after Republicans won the House majority in the 2010 midterm e******n, reject almost all of Obama’s initiatives.
“It’s led to all this anger,” said Norman J. Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “They tried to make this entire process look ugly and illegitimate. It worked. In the process of winning these short-term victories in the midterms, they laid the groundwork for Trump.”
Now, some of the same Freedom Caucus lawmakers who prompted Boehner’s early retirement last fall are bearing down on Ryan.
Many are scoffing at the higher government funding levels Boehner had accepted as part of a compromise with Democrats last year. That deal was supposed to “clear the barn” for Ryan by reversing some of the automatic “sequester” cuts that factions of both parties said were too severe. But many Republicans who didn’t like the deal then don’t like it any better now, and Ryan doesn’t have enough v**es to pass the budget without them.
Without an approved budget, it will be harder for Congress to pass the annual appropriation bills needed to fund government services. Ryan can’t rely on Democrats, as Boehner did, because the proposed budget contains Republican priorities, like a Medicare overhaul with a new voucher program, that Democrats oppose.
Ryan initially escaped blame from conservatives for the deal Boehner made, but the honeymoon is now over and Congress risks a government shutdown if new money is not approved by Oct. 1.
“Victory would be not shutting down the government,” said Ron Bonjean, a former House Republican leadership aide who is now a strategist.
Some in the Freedom Caucus appreciate Ryan’s willingness to work with them, but see little change in the outcome. “Paul was part of the Boehner entourage,” said Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), a Freedom Caucus member.
Ryan is falling back on what he has always done best: talking about ideas.
This is how Ryan rose in Congress, as a sk**led communicator of a conservative vision. Now, rather than using the biggest House majority in generations as a legislative factory that churns out bills, Ryan is turning it into a think tank to produce ideological position papers on taxes, national security, poverty and other issues to inform the eventual Republican p**********l nominee at the party’s convention.
“What he’s trying to do is provide an alternative to a p**********l campaign that many Republicans are looking on with horror,” Ornstein said. “He’s trying to say, ‘Look at me, I’m a different kind of Republican.’”
Ryan has said flatly that he will not be the party’s nominee. But his name is often mentioned as a last-minute alternative to Trump or Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, similar to the way he was drafted to take over as speaker.
Ryan is also working to ease the party infighting by rebuilding trust little by little, giving detractors a seat at the table, and throwing open decision-making to the troops, even if that means House Republicans cannot agree on a strategy that will pass a budget by the April deadline.
So far, the outcome has been a decidedly improved mood on Capitol Hill. Where previously the party’s testy private sessions ended with Republicans lining up at microphones to fume at leadership, they now wait their turn to offer solutions in a more cooperative atmosphere.
Several bills have been signed into law under Ryan’s tenure, including a multi-year highway-funding measure and an overhaul of the No Child Left Behind education law. The ones that Obama vetoed — including a repeal of the Affordable Care Act — have become a badge of honor for Republicans who p***e themselves on forcing a showdown with the White House.
But the stalemate on the budget is a particularly frustrating setback for lawmakers who just a few years ago promoted a policy of no-budget, no-pay — blocking congressional paychecks until a spending plan was approved.
Detractors see Ryan squandering the House majority by failing to dig in and lead. Democrats roll their eyes at his inability to muscle his troops. And even rank-and-file Republicans say it’s tough trying to convince v**ers back home that the party deserves the White House when Congress is idling.
“When push comes to shove, you have to be a leader,” said Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), adding that congressional inaction is fueling Trump’s rise. “Putting it in neutral is dumber than standing water. It isn’t selling.” lisa.mascaro@latimes.com  

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:07:49   #
zillaorange
 
cons as in the THUGS your man in the oval office releases from prison !?!

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:11:45   #
Progressive One
 
zillaorange wrote:
cons as in the THUGS your man in the oval office releases from prison !?!


Nah, I'm talking bout the ones that are sinking the GOP ship!!

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2016 17:19:55   #
Weewillynobeerspilly Loc: North central Texas
 
A Democrat In 2016 wrote:
Nah, I'm talking bout the ones that are sinking the GOP ship!!



Why do you care? I saw where you claimed to be a foreign national.....you cannot v**e except in local e******ns...maybe.

So did you lie about the foreign national status? Or did you lie in previous statements about your v**e going to Hillary? Either way, there is a lie in there somewhere...which one is it?

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:26:51   #
zillaorange
 
A Democrat In 2016 wrote:
Nah, I'm talking bout the ones that are sinking the GOP ship!!


you're a keeper Democrat 2016 !!! LOL !!! I have a great idea, we should have an OPP Convention somewhere in the middle of the Country !!!

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:27:40   #
Progressive One
 
Weewillynobeerspilly wrote:
Why do you care? I saw where you claimed to be a foreign national.....you cannot v**e except in local e******ns...maybe.

So did you lie about the foreign national status? Or did you lie in previous statements about your v**e going to Hillary? Either way, there is a lie in there somewhere...which one is it?


dumb ass questions deserve dumb ass answers

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:34:06   #
Progressive One
 
zillaorange wrote:
you're a keeper Democrat 2016 !!! LOL !!! I have a great idea, we should have an OPP Convention somewhere in the middle of the Country !!!


For what? The great shoot out? :evil: :twisted: :evil: :shock: :twisted: :evil: :evil:

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2016 17:41:00   #
DamnYANKEE
 
A Democrat In 2016 wrote:
New speaker, same old struggles

Ryan has been unable to beat conservative pushback that doomed Boehner.

BY LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON — When Rep. Paul D. Ryan took over as House speaker, it was supposed to signal a new era for Republicans — the arrival of a younger, more conservative visionary who scrubbed the cigarette smoke stains from outgoing Speaker John A. Boehner’s Capitol office and promised a fresh start.
Republicans craved the upbeat, button-down image Ryan offered. And his team served up the Ryan brand with marketing flourish — lofty speeches, a TV blitz and videos galore, including a cheeky snow-cam from the speaker’s balcony showing the winter blizzard over the National Mall.
But five months in, the Wisconsin Republican finds himself with a familiar problem. As Congress is careening toward another budget crisis and the party is ripping itself apart over Donald Trump’s rise, the man best known as the architect of the GOP’s austere spending blueprint is likely to miss an April 15 deadline to approve a new funding plan for 2017.
He’s been unable to overcome the same resistance from the conservative House Freedom Caucus that doomed his predecessor, and is so far similarly unwilling to use the power of the speaker’s office to force stragglers to fall into line.
On the top issue of the day, the turbulent p**********l race, Ryan has refused to wade into the muck, fearful of alienating House Republicans who back Trump, but also worried about tarnishing his own image in case the party needs his help at a brokered convention in July.
To some, Ryan’s repeated calls for Republicans to “raise our gaze” and his frequent attempts to position himself as the GOP’s deep thinker are starting to give off an air of ivory tower insignificance. Conservatives wonder whether he’s still a “young gun” trying to shake up the party.
At a Trump rally in Ryan’s Wisconsin hometown of Janesville last week, the crowd booed the mention of the speaker’s name.
“Now we understand why he didn’t want the job: Congress is broken and it’s hard for anybody to fix it,” said John Feehery, a former Republican aide and now a party strategist. “Jumping on the back of this tiger has not been easy.”
Allies see Ryan, who declined to be interviewed for this story, as a leader who is slowly and deliberately piecing back together a Republican Party that appears to have imploded during President Obama’s years in the White House.
In many ways, the speaker’s problems are of his own making, the result of a leadership strategy he helped forge: to recruit the most conservative candidates to run for office and then, after Republicans won the House majority in the 2010 midterm e******n, reject almost all of Obama’s initiatives.
“It’s led to all this anger,” said Norman J. Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “They tried to make this entire process look ugly and illegitimate. It worked. In the process of winning these short-term victories in the midterms, they laid the groundwork for Trump.”
Now, some of the same Freedom Caucus lawmakers who prompted Boehner’s early retirement last fall are bearing down on Ryan.
Many are scoffing at the higher government funding levels Boehner had accepted as part of a compromise with Democrats last year. That deal was supposed to “clear the barn” for Ryan by reversing some of the automatic “sequester” cuts that factions of both parties said were too severe. But many Republicans who didn’t like the deal then don’t like it any better now, and Ryan doesn’t have enough v**es to pass the budget without them.
Without an approved budget, it will be harder for Congress to pass the annual appropriation bills needed to fund government services. Ryan can’t rely on Democrats, as Boehner did, because the proposed budget contains Republican priorities, like a Medicare overhaul with a new voucher program, that Democrats oppose.
Ryan initially escaped blame from conservatives for the deal Boehner made, but the honeymoon is now over and Congress risks a government shutdown if new money is not approved by Oct. 1.
“Victory would be not shutting down the government,” said Ron Bonjean, a former House Republican leadership aide who is now a strategist.
Some in the Freedom Caucus appreciate Ryan’s willingness to work with them, but see little change in the outcome. “Paul was part of the Boehner entourage,” said Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), a Freedom Caucus member.
Ryan is falling back on what he has always done best: talking about ideas.
This is how Ryan rose in Congress, as a sk**led communicator of a conservative vision. Now, rather than using the biggest House majority in generations as a legislative factory that churns out bills, Ryan is turning it into a think tank to produce ideological position papers on taxes, national security, poverty and other issues to inform the eventual Republican p**********l nominee at the party’s convention.
“What he’s trying to do is provide an alternative to a p**********l campaign that many Republicans are looking on with horror,” Ornstein said. “He’s trying to say, ‘Look at me, I’m a different kind of Republican.’”
Ryan has said flatly that he will not be the party’s nominee. But his name is often mentioned as a last-minute alternative to Trump or Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, similar to the way he was drafted to take over as speaker.
Ryan is also working to ease the party infighting by rebuilding trust little by little, giving detractors a seat at the table, and throwing open decision-making to the troops, even if that means House Republicans cannot agree on a strategy that will pass a budget by the April deadline.
So far, the outcome has been a decidedly improved mood on Capitol Hill. Where previously the party’s testy private sessions ended with Republicans lining up at microphones to fume at leadership, they now wait their turn to offer solutions in a more cooperative atmosphere.
Several bills have been signed into law under Ryan’s tenure, including a multi-year highway-funding measure and an overhaul of the No Child Left Behind education law. The ones that Obama vetoed — including a repeal of the Affordable Care Act — have become a badge of honor for Republicans who p***e themselves on forcing a showdown with the White House.
But the stalemate on the budget is a particularly frustrating setback for lawmakers who just a few years ago promoted a policy of no-budget, no-pay — blocking congressional paychecks until a spending plan was approved.
Detractors see Ryan squandering the House majority by failing to dig in and lead. Democrats roll their eyes at his inability to muscle his troops. And even rank-and-file Republicans say it’s tough trying to convince v**ers back home that the party deserves the White House when Congress is idling.
“When push comes to shove, you have to be a leader,” said Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), adding that congressional inaction is fueling Trump’s rise. “Putting it in neutral is dumber than standing water. It isn’t selling.” lisa.mascaro@latimes.com  
New speaker, same old struggles br br Ryan h... (show quote)


KUNTA ??? WTF do YOU care ... STFU :roll: :roll: :roll:

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:42:40   #
Progressive One
 
DamnYANKEE wrote:
KUNTA ??? WTF do YOU care ... STFU :roll: :roll: :roll:


finish licking the meat popsicle.

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:42:56   #
DamnYANKEE
 
Weewillynobeerspilly wrote:
Why do you care? I saw where you claimed to be a foreign national.....you cannot v**e except in local e******ns...maybe.

So did you lie about the foreign national status? Or did you lie in previous statements about your v**e going to Hillary? Either way, there is a lie in there somewhere...which one is it?


Hes Always sumthin new . Typical COON . NEVER , EVER satisfied with Anything , Hair , clothing style,Skin Color , Name of their Race . NUTHIN . D********G USELESS RACE . Period . Do or say wh**ever KUNTA . Youz STILL bees BLACK .

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 17:46:43   #
DamnYANKEE
 
A Democrat In 2016 wrote:
dumb ass questions deserve dumb ass answers


Then Why is Your STUPID KNEE GROW ASS STILL HERE ??? They DO have All KNEE GROW , LIBTURD C****E DEM Rooms ya know :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reply
 
 
Apr 1, 2016 17:51:53   #
Progressive One
 
DamnYANKEE wrote:
Then Why is Your STUPID KNEE GROW ASS STILL HERE ??? They DO have All KNEE GROW , LIBTURD C****E DEM Rooms ya know :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


lick the meat popsicle like you always do sissy boy.

Reply
Apr 1, 2016 18:13:31   #
markinny
 
DamnYANKEE wrote:
KUNTA ??? WTF do YOU care ... STFU :roll: :roll: :roll:


buckwheat is an egyptian and he helped build the pyramids.



Reply
Apr 1, 2016 18:14:38   #
markinny
 
DamnYANKEE wrote:
Hes Always sumthin new . Typical COON . NEVER , EVER satisfied with Anything , Hair , clothing style,Skin Color , Name of their Race . NUTHIN . D********G USELESS RACE . Period . Do or say wh**ever KUNTA . Youz STILL bees BLACK .





Reply
Apr 1, 2016 18:17:33   #
Progressive One
 
markinny wrote:
buckwheat is an egyptian and he helped build the pyramids.


Too bad the white race did not treat you all as equals. Look how you spend your time. haha :roll: :shock: :roll: :shock:

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