There's always a vintage Trump tweet for every situation.
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This is certainly more on Ryan than anyone else though it's nice that Thumper gets smeared by association. The CEO POS POTUS really showed how clueless his is to how govt works. His reputation to those who believed in him will take a hit.
I'm not sure why he thought the ultimatum would work. just makes his dealmaking abilities look brutally bad. He campaigned on his business acumen being able to sell to congressman. Glad to see he's getting a taste of reality or is he? First instinct for damage control is blame Dems.
Funny thing is Trump didn't drag Ryan through the mud. Actually defending him.
Maybe because he knows that wherever Ryan is on this mess, he's right beside him.
mqt tell me when a government run anything performed better than the private sector.
We'll ignore the personal liberty side of it.
Despite the fact that it hemorrhages money, the USPS represents a government-run enterprise that is cheaper, more reliable, and more accessible than its competitors.
This is certainly more on Ryan than anyone else though it's nice that Thumper gets smeared by association. The CEO POS POTUS really showed how clueless his is to how govt works. His reputation to those who believed in him will take a hit.
Ryan used a bad process to push a truly horrible bill. On the other hand, pushing the blame onto him is letting Trump off the hook unjustly.
Trump failed every imaginable test of leadership along the way. He didn't understand the bill, couldn't articulate a coherent argument for it, couldn't sell it to the public, and couldn't sell it to his own caucus.
It was an embarrassing failure of leadership all around, which he compounded by disclaiming responsibility, blaming the minority party, and pretending he never said things that he said.
It's funny that the would-be authoritarian is not actually an effective leader.
I'm not sure why there's not a general consensus that Ryan is essentially a fraud. All he's ever really done is polish his reputation as a Very Serious Budget Guy (without ever really having to show his work) and put a telegenic face on generic plutocracy-friendly policy.
He's a budget wonk who can't pass a budget. He's an anti-government guy who's spent his entire adult life in government. He's a conservative who can't write major legislation that conservatives support. He's a leader who can't fashion a consensus with a biggest-in-a-century majority.
I'm amazed Trump was still defending the bill not just once but multiple times after it got watered down.
Art of the Deal says don't show desperation but the fact he kept pushing a bill that by even his standards was garbage is mind boggling.
Trump failed every imaginable test of leadership along the way. He didn't understand the bill, couldn't articulate a coherent argument for it, couldn't sell it to the public, and couldn't sell it to his own caucus.
He has an opportunity. And I see it as a test of the campaign-era rhetoric used to sell him to skeptics: he's non-ideological, he's a populist, he's not really a Republican, etc.
Democrats are going to have to ask themselves some tough questions about whether or not they're capable of assembling a governing coalition with enough staying power to get anything bigger and more lasting done in the future (I'm not optimistic about that).
It's also going to be complicated by '18 electoral politics.