
The White House is reportedly working overtime to flip Republican senators back to their side, even after Donald Trump publicly trashed them and advised voters to never elect them to office again.
It comes as the administration suffered a rare defeat in the Senate last week when five members of the presidentâs party broke ranks to support a War Powers resolution aimed at restricting the administration from further strikes against Venezuela submitted by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia), advancing it to a final floor vote. The vote triggered an angry response from Trump on Truth Social.
âRepublicans should be ashamed of the Senators that just voted with Democrats in attempting to take away our Powers to fight and defend the United States of America. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Rand Paul, Josh Hawley, and Todd Young should never be elected to office again,â wrote a furious Trump on Thursday.
Now the White House is reaching out to some or all of those same senators, according to Politico, and working to alleviate the concerns they have about the administrationâs plans for the South American country where U.S. forces abducted its president, Nicolas Maduro, in a stunning raid earlier this month. Maduro is now facing drug trafficking charges in New York.
The White House has until Wednesday, when Kaine says a âvote-a-ramaâ session for the resolution will be held in the Senate and the chamber will debate final passage. Assuming that all Democratic senators remain supportive of the resolution, the presidentâs team would need to flip two Republican votes to defeat the resolution on the final vote.
One of those senators, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, told Politico that her vote wasnât changing. That leaves four others whom the president could conceivably flip. One, Todd Young, declined to comment to the news outlet about whether his stance would change on final passage.
If the White House is successful, it could be yet another case of the chamberâs Republicans mounting resistance to the White House, but only just shy of enough to actually threaten the presidentâs efforts.
Even if the resolution passes, it likely will not matter. The House of Representatives may not even take it up, and if it reaches Trumpâs desk he could still veto it. Overriding Trumpâs veto would require the votes of two-thirds of the Senate.
Still, its advancement last week and potential final passage serve as symbolic rebukes of the vision that the administration has laid out for Venezuela and, more broadly, its military posture in the western hemisphere. The votes come as senators are concurrently discussing Trumpâs threats to use military force to seize Greenland from Denmark, while also threatening other potential interventions in Colombia, Cuba, Mexico and even Iran.
In Venezuela, in particular, the White House now faces questions about the countryâs future. The president and his team havenât said for certain how they believe the transition from Maduroâs presidency should take place, or endorsed a specific figure in Venezuela to take over the reins of government.
U.S. officials accused Maduro of running a vast criminal cartel known as âCartel de los Solesâ which also allegedly involved other top government officials and members of the military and intelligence services.
Trump, on many occasions, has said that the U.S. will ârunâ Venezuela for the time being, and repeatedly refused to rule out prospect of deploying American troops to the country. According to Politico, reassurances that the latter prospect is unlikely were part of the White Houseâs arguments to get Hawley, one of the five Republican defectors, back on board.
Hours before the presidentâs angry statement on Truth Social, Hawley contended in a press gaggle that his vote wasnât meant as a snub of the president. According to news reports, some of the wayward Republican members were subject to sometimes irate calls from the president in the days leading up to last weekâs vote.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Hawley on a phone call that the administration had âno plansâ to deploy troops and if that changed would potentially seek congressional authorization first: âMarco said to me â he said, âwe ⌠have no ground troops. We have no plans to put ground troops in,ââ the Missouri senator told Politico.
For once it seems like it may be Donald Trump, not the Democrats, facing an uphill battle in the GOP-controlled Senate. But ultimately, the president remains unrestrained by Congress as he plots possible expansions of his regime change efforts to Iran, where various estimates indicate that more than 600 people have been killed in government crackdowns against protests that have spread across the country.
On Thursday, the president gave possibly his strongest indication yet that the U.S. was planning to intervene in Iran, possibly with the intent of destabilizing the Iranian government.
âIranian Patriots, KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!! Save the names of the killers and abusers. They will pay a big price,â the president wrote on Truth Social, before vowing: âHELP IS ON ITS WAY.â
