海角大神

海角大神 / Text

In Congress: Work. Dodge tweets. Repeat.

For lawmakers, responding to the president鈥檚 tweets can be a full-time job 鈥 one that many would prefer to avoid. This week, tweet-mania drowned out congressional progress on spending bills.

By Francine Kiefer, Staff writer
Washington

Sen. Lisa Murkowski had just walked off the Senate floor聽on Wednesday when she found herself in a tight reporter scrum, a cluster of phones and digital recorders held toward her face.

A reporter explained that the president had just tweeted that Attorney General Jeff Sessions should shut down special counsel Robert Mueller鈥檚 investigation, and asked the Republican senator what she thought the tweet meant.

鈥淚 am not going to comment, because I don鈥檛 know what it means, because 鈥 you know what? I haven鈥檛 paid attention to news this morning,鈥 the Alaskan said.

The reporter interrupted: 鈥淐an I read it to you?鈥

Senator Murkowski, ignoring him, went on: 鈥...because the news that was important to me was passing these appropriations bills.鈥

As she started to move down a hallway off-limits to media, she could be heard saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 so tired [of]鈥︹ But then the reporter called after her that he had read the tweet to Sen. Susan Collins (R) of Maine, and that Senator Collins gasped and said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 unbelievable.鈥

Murkowski turned. Looking at the scrum, held back as if by an invisible cordon, she remarked exasperatedly: 鈥淲ell then, Susan is probably right.鈥

Before this era of an unfiltered president with a digital megaphone, reporters might have been asking Murkowski about the unusual speed and bipartisanship with which the Senate is passing spending bills these days 鈥 including a package聽on Wednesday聽where Murkowski played a key role.聽Instead, it once again became a day in which lawmakers found they could get no message across, aside from their reactions to President Trump鈥檚 Twitter feed.聽

There are tweets Republicans on the Hill can ignore; then there are the tweets they wish they could ignore, but that wind up dominating the news cycle. This one 鈥 which some Democrats argued amounted to obstruction of justice 鈥 not only sent reporters scurrying, but also drowned out a genuinely positive narrative for lawmakers: they are actually getting stuff done.

Responding to the president鈥檚 own clearly stated position this spring that he will never again sign another gargantuan, all-in-one spending bill, senators have been working diligently 鈥 and cooperatively 鈥 to pass more bite-sized spending packages before the fiscal year ends on聽Sept. 30. Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell (R) of Kentucky has cut the August recess short to get this work, along with more nominations, done (with the politically convenient side effect of keeping Democrats, who have more seats than Republicans up this cycle, off the campaign trail).

Funding the government is one of lawmakers鈥 most basic jobs. If they were doing it properly, they would pass 12 separate bills to fund each of the government agencies, rather than create the usual showdowns 鈥 and sometimes shutdowns 鈥 over one massive, indecipherable bill that鈥檚 used for political leverage. Senator McConnell and minority leader Chuck Schumer (D) of New York have been meeting daily to move the spending bills along, and Republicans got buy-in from the White House to clear nine of the bills before the September deadline.

But then a tweet tornado hit. Mr. Trump tweeted聽on Sunday聽that he would be willing to shut down the government if Democrats don鈥檛 agree to funding border security 鈥 including a wall. Shutdown chaos is the last thing Republicans want just before an election. But they were forced to field reporters鈥 queries about it all week.

As senators streamed in and out of the chamber for votes, the media swarmed them with questions: Do they think the president really wants a shutdown? Would a shutdown hurt Republicans in the midterms? What do they make of Trump calling for Mr. Sessions to end the Mueller investigation right as the trial of his former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, was getting under way?

A typical response from Republicans was, 鈥測ou鈥檒l have to ask the president what he means鈥 鈥 along with insisting they鈥檙e just focused on getting their work done.聽

Sen. Thom Tillis (R) of North Carolina stopped briefly to talk to reporters. Should聽legislation protecting the special counsel (which Senator Tillis has co-sponsored) now get a vote on the Senate floor?聽鈥淣o,鈥 Tillis responded. 鈥淸Trump]聽wants to see the investigation closed. He didn鈥檛 say anything in the record that I鈥檝e reviewed this morning that said he wants [Mueller] fired. There鈥檚 a difference.鈥

Indeed, the president鈥檚 lawyers and spokesperson later described Trump鈥檚 tweet as an opinion, not an order, because Trump used the word 鈥渟hould鈥 instead of 鈥渕ust,鈥 writing: 鈥淭his is a terrible situation and Attorney General Jeff Sessions should stop this聽Rigged Witch Hunt聽right now鈥︹

But Tillis鈥檚 careful response revealed the degree to which the senator 鈥 or an aide 鈥 must have studied the tweet itself. Which points to a sifting that frequently takes place: Tweets to worry about, tweets not to worry about; tweets a Republican can let slide; tweets a Republican is going to have to comment on.

Either way, it was clear Tillis would have preferred not to deal with such questions at all. Within seconds, the lanky politician turned and strode into the chamber.