Obama, Republican leaders meet on final year agenda
WASHINGTON; President Barack Obama is bringing the Republicans who run the House and Senate to the White House to try to hash out an agenda for his final year, even as his top legislative priorities appear to be losing steam.
Obama's meeting with House Speaker Paul Ryan on Tuesday will be his first since the Wisconsin Republican took the helm more than three months ago, the long delay illustrating the lack of urgency for Obama in engaging with a Congress clearly resolved to wait him out. Obama and Ryan planned a private lunch following a joint meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, whose focus this year is largely on protecting vulnerable Republicans and keeping the Senate in his party's hands come November.
As Ryan swept into the speakership in October, the White House was cautiously optimistic that the policy-minded Republican, given a powerful mandate by his unruly caucus, might be able to work with Obama in 2016 on a narrow set of issues with some bipartisan overlap. Although Obama has scaled back his legislative ambitions from the sweeping proposals he pushed earlier in his presidency, he still needs Congress to help finish what he's started in certain areas — trade being chief among them.
But with campaign season in full bloom, enticing Republicans to work with Obama on much of anything is becoming an increasingly arduous task, especially as many lawmakers facing competitive primaries seek to avoid votes that conservative challengers could use against them. Just as Ryan and McConnell were heading to the White House, the Republicans and Democrats running to replace Obama were shuttling from Iowa to New Hampshire for the next step in a presidential primary that's now the dominant force in the political conversation.
Heading into Obama's final year, perhaps no issue seemed more ripe for compromise than a criminal justice overhaul that both parties agree is sorely needed. In an early sign of progress, a Senate panel approved legislation easing strict sentencing requirements for some nonviolent offenders.
But McConnell has been moving cautiously without committing to a vote while the bill's Republican backers downplay prospects for a breakthrough this year. Ryan's deputy, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, on Monday became the latest Republican to warn that it might need to wait until next year, when Obama steps aside.
The White House said Puerto Rico's fiscal crisis, efforts to deal with opioid addiction and the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal were also on the agenda.
"These are all things that Republicans independently say are priorities for them," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
Obama is seeking final congressional approval for the sweeping free-trade deal with Asia, which most Republicans support and most Democrats oppose. To Obama's dismay, many Republican leaders have suggested they might not vote until after November's election, leaving the fate of a major pillar in Obama's economic legacy to the unpredictable lame-duck period.
Republican leadership aides listed a number of other likely topics, including North Korea sanctions, energy legislation, Vice President Joe Biden's cancer initiative and the Guantanamo Bay prison that Obama has been trying to close over Republican opposition. Obama's call for a new war authorization to deal with the Islamic State group was another focus, though Republicans and Obama disagree sharply about what limitations should be included, dimming prospects for a bill this year.
In a sign of the Republicans' eagerness to move past Obama, Ryan will return from lunch with Obama for a House vote on overriding Obama's veto of a bill gutting his signature health care law.
Although Obama and Ryan aren't close — they campaigned against each other in 2012, when Ryan was the Republican vice presidential nominee — White House officials regard Ryan as a serious-minded policymaker who negotiates in good faith. Ryan was recruited to be speaker amid deep divisions between moderates and the conservatives who wield significant power in the House.
"While the House is focused on a bold agenda for 2017, the speaker appreciates the opportunity to see if we can find any areas of common ground in the year ahead," said Ryan spokesman Doug Andres.