4 Political Minefields Waiting for Trump Following His Health Care Failure
On Day 99, Trump’s To-Do List Has Few ‘Done’ Marks · The Fiscal Times

Hours before President Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan were forced to throw in the towel and withdraw their plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin was telling a Washington audience that overhauling the federal tax code will be a lot easier than trying to rewrite federal health care law.

“Health care and tax reforms are two very different things,” Mnuchin told a breakfast gathering sponsored by Axios. “Health care is a very, very complicated issue. In a way [changes in the tax code are] a lot simpler.”

Related: In Defeat, Trump and Ryan Offer No Path Forward on Health Care

Trump and his advisers sought to gloss over the significance of the president’s historic setback, largely at the hands of an unintended coalition arch-conservative and unyielding House Freedom Caucus members who thought the bill didn’t go far enough in dismantling the ACA and more moderate Republicans concerned the bill was going too far.

Striking a philosophical pose, Trump blamed the Democrats for his failure and declared it was time to put health care reform behind him and move on to challenges more to his liking, such as overhauling the tax system and trade policy. “It’s enough already,” Trump said.

Outside observers were less charitable.

“It’s a debacle,” said Larry Sabato, a University of Virginia political scientist. “For a president whose party controls both houses of Congress to lose on the first big bill of his term is staggering.”

Related: Budget Group Says Changes to AHCA Negate Half of Deficit Savings

The administration may well be misreading the political landscape again if Trump and Pence think they can shrug off this defeat and move ahead with the rest of their ambitious political agenda.

John Zogby, a veteran pollster and political analyst, described the defeat of the Republican health plan as “a breathtaking and multiple-level loss” with serious implications for the administration’s ability to advance other legislative priorities.

And the problem isn’t just between the White House and Capitol Hill. Some political analysts say that the collapse of the Republicans’ American Health Care Act was emblematic of a glaring ideological cleavage within the House Republican caucus and between House and Senate Republicans more generally that will make future deal-making equally challenging.

In fact, the failure of the GOP health care plan could signal trouble ahead on a whole range of fiscal issues, from Trump’s and Ryan’s effort to rewrite the tax code for the first time since 1986 to passing new spending plans for this year and next and raising the debt ceiling by early fall to avert a first-ever default on U.S. debt.