Mayors to Trump: We can be great partners
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| Washington
A delegation of America鈥檚 mayors is visiting Washington this week, meeting with senators and arguing that a bipartisan, problem-solving approach is the only way forward on health care, tax reform, and infrastructure.
New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, president of the non-partisan US Conference of Mayors, said his group searches for policy answers based on results, not ideology. 鈥淲e want to model good behavior for how you get solutions for people on the ground,鈥 Mr. Landrieu said at a Monitor-hosted breakfast with reporters. The Conference represents the 1,408 US cities with a population of 30,000 or more.
America鈥檚 cities got off to a rocky start with the Trump administration. During his campaign, then-candidate Donald Trump said, 鈥淥ur inner cities are a disaster 鈥 You get shot walking to the store. They have no education. They have no jobs.鈥
Landrieu, a Democrat who has been mayor of New Orleans since 2010, said, 鈥淭hat is certainly not reflective of cities throughout America.鈥 An estimated 85 percent of the US population lives in cities. Mr. Trump鈥檚 remarks 鈥渒ind of communicated to the mayors of America that the president was perhaps uninformed at best,鈥 Landrieu said.
'We are builders'
Mayors鈥 concerns about Trump administration policy proposals go beyond issues of language. 鈥淭one is important,鈥 said Democratic Mayor Stephen Benjamin of Columbia, S.C., at the Monitor Breakfast. 鈥淭he challenge is when that tone then makes its way into policy 鈥 talking about eliminating [community development block grants] or maybe wrong-headed tax policy.鈥
The Trump administration budget calls for eliminating community-development block grants, a $3 billion Housing and Urban Development Department program that provides money for housing and economic development needs. Mayors also worry about the Trump administration鈥檚 preliminary plan to reform federal taxes, which eliminates the deduction for state and local taxes.
鈥淲e believe that repeal would represent double taxation,鈥 said Mr. Benjamin. 鈥淭axpayers are not a special interest. Cities and state and local governments are not a special interest.鈥
While concerned about specific Trump administration policy proposals, Landrieu stressed the mayors鈥 desire for consensus and moving forward on issues of importance to citizens.
鈥淲e are not here to resist. We are here to construct. We are builders. We are not destroyers and [the president] will find great partners in the mayors of America if we are engaged in a constructive and thoughtful way,鈥 Landrieu said.
Thoughts on policing, abortion
At the breakfast, John Giles, the Republican mayor of Mesa, Ariz., was asked about President Trump鈥檚 Aug. 28 remarks telling police, 鈥淧lease don鈥檛 be too nice鈥 when loading suspects into vehicles. The president added, 鈥淵ou can take the hand away, okay?鈥
Mayor Giles responded, 鈥淎s a mayor, I don鈥檛 think there is anything he could have said that would have been more disturbing.聽 He may have said a lot of things I disagree with over the course of his tenure but that has got to be close to the top.鈥 聽
The White House later said the president was joking.
Earlier this week Rep. Ben Ray Luj谩n (D) of New Mexico, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said the organization would not withhold funds from congressional candidates who oppose abortion rights. It is a move that angered some abortion-rights supporters.
Landrieu was asked whether support for abortion rights should be a litmus test for Democratic candidates. 鈥淚t is a bad mistake. On issues like that, both parties should be big-tent parties,鈥 he said.