Kurieuo wrote:Here's the thing. When people vote someone in, they vote them in on their promises (as gullible as it might sound to believe a promise from anyone running for POTUS). They are voted in by one side, to push through in any manner possible that side's views (promises their campaign were run upon). If they win, then they have an obligation to serve the best interests of that side, and so keep their promises in FULL so much as it depends upon them.
That might be the case in Australia, where you have the luxury of constitutional methods for breaking up gridlock, but here in the States what you're describing is a recipe for decades of vicious partisan feuds. We don't have double dissolution or joint sittings of both houses or anything like that. All we have is elections, most of which have been rendered moot points by gerrymandering and/or demographics. That means that when things get gridlocked here they're likely to stay that way for a long, long time, and there's not a damned thing that anybody can do about it.
Granted, the Republicans have complete control of government at the moment, but that's not going to last forever. If the continue with their current show of incompetence and disunity they might just lose the Senate in 2018, and if Trump thinks that he'll get reelected with nothing but the 35% that thinks he walks on water he's in for a rude surprise.
And finally, if Trump wants to do things like pass a massive infrastructure bill and introduce Trumpcare (which he says will lower premiums while giving better care to more people, lol) he's going to need Democratic help to get past the Freedom Caucus.
Kurieuo wrote:Trump is now trying to cater to everyone in some major policies, in both healthcare and foreign, and that will bite him hard on the butt.
He doesn't have a choice. There are moderate Republicans out there whose people love Obamacare and hated that garbage that Ryan proposed. Trump's not going to get their support on a repeal bill unless he's willing to keep things like Medicaid expansion. Meantime, the Freedom Caucus (who have the backing of the Koch brothers, feel pretty secure in their seats, and aren't a bit scared of Sideshow Don) aren't going to accept any bill that fails to completely gut the stuff that the moderates need to hang on to.
The clear path forward on healthcare would be to cut out the Freedom Caucus and work with moderate Republicans and Democrats to shore up Obamacare. That's also the path forward on the infrastructure bill. And based on the rumblings from the far right after the Syria strike it might be his best bet there as well.
Trump's path to greatness, if there is one, is a path of compromise, bipartisanship, and cooperation.
Personally, I think he's more likely to get impeached.