COLUMN: The path ahead for Trump, Republicans in Congress
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The usual Democrat suspects, the liberal media and other assorted sore losers are up in arms over President-elect Trump’s announced selections for cabinet posts and other leadership positions in his incoming administration. Really, Rachel Maddow and the crew of lefty wackos at MSNBC are outraged? Isn’t that too bad? Trump’s appropriate response should echo the eloquent words of President Barack Obama when he met with deflated Republican congressional leaders after he took office in 2009: “Elections have consequences, I won.” In Trumpspeak that might include, “go pound sand” or stronger words to that effect. In baseball jargon: “It’s the bottom of the inning, now it’s our turn at bat.”
I like most of his picks and love several. His questionable choice for attorney general of Matt Gaetz the acrimonious, extremist firebrand who can’t get along with others, might just be The Donald’s idea of a spiteful “in your face” taunt to anti-Trumpers. There’s little chance Gaetz will be confirmed in the Senate where every Democrat and a good many Republicans will vote against him. This might be a shrewd Trump strategy to distract the mob with a Gaetz lightning rod and throw an easy blackball to the opposition.
When the American electorate delivered the presidency and control of the executive branch to Trump along with a Republican majority in both houses of Congress it was a mandate for dramatic change to restore the Republic and traditional American values.
The mission will be aided by a majority of originalist justices on the Supreme Court who regard the Constitution as a restraint on unlimited government and a protection of individual liberty, rather than the Democrat notion that it’s a “living Constitution” that empowers progressive justices to reinterpret the Constitution to mean what they think it should according to their leftist ideology.
Dramatic changes in public policy by Trump and Republicans won’t come easily. They’ll face opposition from the liberal media, Democrat politicians, their army of activists, and their radical left-wing core in Congress that’s no longer just a “fringe.” In fact, those 99 members of the so-called House Progressive Caucus (100, including socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders) constitute almost half of House Democrats. Biden and congressional Democrats weaponized the progressive socialist agenda and cultural revolution to its inevitable collapse and have been held to account by a majority of voters in this election.
Trump was elected president, not king. But there’s a new sheriff in town who can do a lot on his authority, like overriding Biden’s executive orders — some of which were brazenly unconstitutional.
The tidal wave of illegal immigrants will recede as Trump frees the Border Patrol to do its job. And he’ll free ICE do its job across the country’s interior to deal with illegals. Striking other Biden orders will reverse programs and overspending that circumvented Congress. Trump will fill thousands of non-Civil Service positions that serve at the pleasure of the president throughout the federal bureaucracy and on boards and commissions. Revoking unnecessary cumbersome regulations will energize the economy. He’ll appoint U.S. attorneys and federal judges. He’ll shake up the Pentagon at the highest levels including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appointing senior civilians and promoting generals and admirals who will roll back Biden’s politicization.
Nevertheless, much of the dramatic change the public has demanded must come through Congress where the power of the purse resides. In 2025, the Senate will have 53 Republicans and 47 Democrats. If Democrat opposition remains unified, they’ll dig in their heels and create gridlock to thwart change by blocking vital legislation with filibusters requiring 60 votes to override. But the filibuster isn’t in the Constitution. It can be eliminated with a majority vote.
During the campaign, assuming a Democrat electoral sweep, Kamala Harris inadvertently gave Republicans a foot in the door when she promised to eliminate the Senate filibuster. Now, Republicans should do that. I’ve been reluctant to support that in the past but Democrats have made this a political war and I have no doubt they were poised to kill the filibuster had they won the election. Republicans need to beat them to the punch.
Mike Rosen is a Denver-based American radio personality and political commentator.





