Ryan Still Holding Out on Much of Trump’s Agenda

House speaker Paul Ryan has publicly rooted for a Donald Trump victory this November, but there are still indications the two are on a different page on policy.

Ryan said on Thursday that governing with Trump as president would make life easier on Republicans hoping to reform government. But considering how disconsonant the GOP nominee has been with party orthodoxy—his disinterest in entitlement reform and ambitious plans for infrastructure spending, for example—just how easy would it be? Here’s more from the Atlantic, which hosted Ryan at a forum Thursday morning:

If Trump wins the White House and Ryan keeps his job, the two would presumably work together, but Ryan on Thursday sounded reluctant to endorse elements of Trump’s agenda that deviate from conservative orthodoxy. Ryan didn’t “want to get into hypotheticals” when asked if he would help Trump achieve his stated aim of renegotiating—or, absent that, withdrawing from—the North American Free Trade Agreement. He eventually conceded that “there are things we can do to upgrade and improve” the deal. When Ryan was asked if he would help Trump pass a $550 billion infrastructure bill, an amount the GOP nominee has indicated he wants to see spent, the crowd broke into laughter. “That’s not in the ‘Better Way’ agenda,” Ryan quipped.

Ryan’s responses didn’t all seem to be verbal, either.


Trump said he wasn’t ready to support that agenda in May, when he helped stoke a political fight between Ryan and a long-shot primary challenger cut from Trump cloth. (Made in Wisconsin, actually.)

One feature of the agenda states that “[o]ur [p]resident has been acting more like a monarch than an elected official. That stops now. Our plan limits his power.”

Here’s what Trump said of GOP lawmakers in June: “You know, the Republicans—honestly, folks, our leaders have to get tougher. This is too tough to do it alone, but you know what, I think I’m going to be forced to. … We have to have our Republicans either stick together or let me just do it by myself.”

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