In fairness the Mueller act is completely over for the DEMs. It is already wrapping fish. However, fallout will be stinging the DEMS for the next two years. Yet that is what it is.
The policy front will be dominated by these two issues reported here and that is quite right. Both are a work in progress. Seriously the immigration problem is been converted through numbers into a potential Barbarian Invasion and could well be intended. The scale is already surprising and clearly deliberate.
I also think that election reform will soon dominate the conversion as well. The conversation is already underway.
Donald Dossier: Health Care and Immigration Already Trumped Mueller
https://www.ozy.com/opinion/donald-dossier-health-care-and-immigration-alre
ady-trumped-mueller/93544?
Because the issues that decided 2018 will shape 2020.
The Donald Dossier: Cutting Through This Week’s Noisy News With What You Need to Know
The president had some pep in his step this week.
“Bullshit,” Donald Trump crowed to a roaring throng of fans in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, on Thursday when speaking of the investigation into
his 2016 campaign. The victory lap comes courtesy of a four-page summary of Robert Mueller’s much-anticipated report, which can be further condensed in Trumpworld to: “No collusion.”
Any
revelations about his attempts to obstruct the investigation and other
loose Russia-related ends in the full nearly 400-page report will have
to wait on Attorney General Bill Barr, but a crippling blow to the
president this was not. Even as Trump plans to turn the report back on
his enemies and use it as a campaign cudgel — “This is not, ‘Oh, gee,
it’s over. Let’s forget about it,’” attorney Rudy Giuliani told The Atlantic — its release did not represent an assured win in 2020 either. In fact, two non-Mueller developments were more telling on how the next 19 months will proceed.
First
came Monday night, when Trump’s Department of Justice sought in a court
filing to slay the entire Affordable Care Act, the great unfinished
business of the Trump presidency.
Trump is trying to rebrand the GOP as the “party of health care” …
Plaintiffs
in the case, now before the fairly conservative Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals, argue that the tax reform law, which reduced the penalty for
not having health insurance to $0, effectively kills the entire law
because the Supreme Court only upheld it in 2012 as an exercise of
Congress’ taxing power. While the case was brought by 20 Republican
states, the Trump administration’s position had been that only certain
restrictions on health insurers should be struck down. But the DOJ on
Monday filed a brief saying it agreed with a lower court that the entire
law now is invalid.
Trump is trying to rebrand the GOP
as the “party of health care” and said a group of Republican senators
would work on a replacement plan, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell wants no part of it, as the issue has turned into a Democratic
strength.
Meanwhile, immigration is surging on the
southern border. Overwhelmed officials in El Paso, Texas, are housing
migrants in a tent under a bridge. At his Michigan rally, Trump decried
the asylum seekers “trying to invade our country,” as his Army Corps of
Engineers scouts terrain to start construction on several dozen miles of
border walls. On Friday, he again threatened to shut down the entire
Mexican border.
This
is the issue on which Trump has staked his presidency, including the
record-length government shutdown and controversial emergency
declaration. However much of that “big, beautiful wall” he can construct
will be a showpiece for his political base … but hyping high numbers of
immigrants carries political risk too, especially if his big talk and
tough policies (i. e., family separations) fail to stem the Central
American tide.
At the same time, Democrats have little
agenda here other than opposing Trump (it’s the health care inverse), so
they’d rather talk about other things. On balance, border crisis
headlines help Trump, while health care crisis headlines harm him. Those
will continue, while Trump–Russia is likely to fade.
Barr’s
and Mueller’s expected congressional testimonies will produce cable
news meltdown events, as will the release of Mueller’s full report,
which the attorney general has promised by mid-April. But impeachment appears to be all but off the table, which works to Democrats’ political benefit.
On
the campaign trail, you’re not going to hear much about Vladimir Putin,
but you will hear a lot about health care and immigration. Democrats
won on this playing field convincingly in 2018 — hence the heartburn
among the Capitol Hill GOP after the health care announcement. But
projecting midterm results on a presidential race is a dangerous game.
The Republican polling firm 0ptimus released fresh 2020 numbers
in conjunction with Firehouse Strategies this week, finding Trump
trailing a trio of top Democrats (Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders and Beto
O’Rourke) in head-to-head matchups in Wisconsin. But Trump virtually
tied Biden and Sanders in Pennsylvania and Michigan, with decent leads
over the lesser-known O’Rourke. This comes after Dems won Pennsylvania
and Michigan with relative ease last fall.
The poll also
looked at Obama–Trump voters, who have been dissected like a high
school science class frog since 2016, finding them mostly sticking to
the president — even before Mueller’s verdict came out. In all three
states, more voters disapprove of the job he’s doing than approve, but
Trump was unpopular in 2016 too. His approval numbers have been pretty
steady since taking office, with low ebbs in the mid-30s in the second
half of 2017, around the same time Republicans nearly repealed
Obamacare.
Perhaps sometime around June 2020, Chief
Justice John Roberts will strike the blow the late Sen. John McCain
would not and end Obamacare, with a decision far more powerful — both in
substance and politics — than anything Robert Mueller could write.
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