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The Five Trials of Trump 47

February 13, 2025
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These are heady days at the White House. President Trump scored a personal record-high job approval rating of 53% in a new CBS poll. Likely even more pleasing to Team Trump, 70% of those surveyed said he’s doing “the same things he promised in the campaign.” Sixty-nine percent called him “tough,” 63% “energetic,” 60% “focused” and 58% “effective.” Given his 49.8% finish last November, many people who didn’t vote for him are positively impressed.

So far, the administration’s strategy of flooding the zone and dominating the news cycle is working. But there’s a warning in the CBS data. Only 31%—roughly the size of his MAGA hard-core base—said Mr. Trump is focusing the “right amount” on “lowering prices.” Two-thirds said it wasn’t enough. That must change, especially after Wednesday’s Labor Department report on January’s rising inflation. Mr. Trump won largely because he promised to fight inflation and strengthen the economy.

The president will face five legislative tests of his ability to improve Americans’ finances in fairly quick order, says G. William Hoagland of the Bipartisan Policy Center. Each congressional fight will deeply affect the stock market, jobs, paychecks and his poll numbers.

First, Washington faces a shutdown on March 14 if Congress doesn’t approve a spending bill for the balance of the 2025 fiscal year or, less ideally, for long enough to allow more negotiations. This takes a simple majority in the House but 60 votes in the Senate, so Democratic support is needed.

Second, the Senate and House must each approve a budget resolution for this fiscal year, followed by a conference of both chambers that agrees on a final budget resolution, which is then passed by simple majorities in the House and Senate.

Third, after the conference committee’s budget resolution has been passed, the House and Senate can take up budget reconciliation. This would allow each chamber to pass legislation by majority vote to extend, and perhaps expand, Mr. Trump’s 2017 tax cuts.

Fourth, Congress must raise the debt ceiling. It hit the current limit of $36.1 trillion on Jan. 21. The Treasury Department is using what are called “extraordinary measures” to avoid breaching this amount. Treasury will exhaust its bag of tricks in late spring or early summer, depending on how plentiful tax receipts are on April 15. 

Finally, Congress should be working now on setting the budget and appropriation levels for the 2026 fiscal year. That’s also supposed to be completed by April 15.

It will be hard to get these five items done in a short time frame. Congress is narrowly divided. Republicans hold slim leads in the House (218-215) and the Senate (53-47). It will be tough to get enough Democrats to reach the 60 Senate votes required to fund the government and raise the debt ceiling.

Even passing budget resolutions and reconciliation, which require only simple majorities, will be difficult. House and Senate Republicans disagree, especially on reconciliation. Senate Republicans want two reconciliation measures: one now, focused on border spending and defense, and one later focused on tax cuts. House GOP leaders favor one reconciliation measure. They think bundling all the goodies into one bag makes it easier for members to accept politically unpalatable provisions. Still, House Republicans are deeply divided on these issues, making consensus in that chamber difficult to reach.

Resolving these thorny issues requires Mr. Trump’s intervention. He can’t leave GOP House and Senate leaders to work this out. He must cajole, guide, encourage and persuade them into completing these essential tasks. In other words, he must lead.

Read More at the WSJ

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