Milbank: As GOP ship sinks, departing Ryan thanks the iceberg

The House speaker, a promising young leader, miscalculated when he tied his fortunes to Trump.

Video: House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wisconsin) told friends and colleagues that he will not seek reelection in the ramp-up to a risky midterm election for Republicans. (Video: Jenny Starrs/Photo: Matt McClain/The Washington Post)

By Dana Milbank

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, did not have his thoughts collected when he faced the cameras after telling Republican colleagues he would not seek re-election to Congress in November.

“I intend to full my serve term,” he announced.

Right. And I luck him good wish.

I can see why Ryan is scrambled. The party he leads is on course for a drubbing, and possibly a historic drubbing. Though much could change, Republican incumbents are voting with their feet — House Republicans who aren’t seeking re-election now number in the mid-40s — and the speaker’s announcement, after just 2 1/2 years in the position, sends the unmistakable if unintended message that the bottom has dropped out.

The speaker’s retirement launched a thousand sinking-ship metaphors. But Capt. Ryan’s abandon-ship announcement adds a unique twist to the metaphor: The thing he’s clinging to as a life raft is actually the iceberg.

Shortly after assuming the speakership, Ryan, a promising young leader, made the mother of all miscalculations: He supported Donald Trump for president, reasoning that he could not remain speaker if he opposed Trump. And so Ryan, the highest GOP officeholder in the land and the party’s 2012 vice presidential nominee, delivered the Republican establishment to Trump.

Now, 15 months into Trump’s disastrous presidency, Ryan’s speakership is ending anyway. The free-market, limited-government conservatism he championed has been destroyed. And yet he still binds himself to the man who destroyed it all.

Fox News’s Mike Emanuel asked whether Ryan was “sending a signal that the House is lost for Republicans.”

Ryan, incredibly, answered by praising Trump. “I’m grateful for the president to give us this chance to actually get this stuff done,” he said.

Was his retirement influenced by the way Trump changed the party?

“Not at all,” Ryan maintained. “… I’m grateful to the president for giving us this opportunity to do big things to get this country on the right track.”

The right track.

Earlier Wednesday, Trump announced via Twitter that he would be firing “nice and new and ‘smart’” missiles into Syria and dared Russia to shoot them down. In recent days, Trump’s third national security adviser started and his homeland security adviser quit; Trump has made noises about firing the special counsel and the deputy attorney general; federal prosecutors probed payments made in 2016 to two women who alleged affairs with Trump; the Congressional Budget Office forecast years of trillion-dollar deficits because of Trump’s tax cuts and spending hikes; there are fears of a trade war; the Environmental Protection Agency administrator is embroiled in an ethics scandal; and after a fire in Trump Tower killed a man, Trump said nothing about the death while boasting about the “well built” building.

Oh, and Trump says things are “very calm” in the White House.

Thank you for all this, Paul Ryan.

Now Republicans are dashing for the exits. Soon after Ryan’s announcement came word that Rep. Dennis A. Ross, R-Florida, a deputy whip, would be retiring. And House Republicans, after listening to Ryan’s announcement at a caucus meeting in the Capitol basement, emerged with grim forecasts.

“There’s a lot of weariness and a lot of exhaustion, frankly,” said Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pennsylvania, who is retiring. “You’re really in a no-win position if you’re running in this cycle,” he said, calling it a “pretty damn toxic political environment. … It’s going to be a referendum on the president of the United States and his conduct in office.”

Rep. Walter B. Jones, R-North Carolina, said chances of keeping the House majority are “probably 50-50.”

Maybe they’ll lose 50 seats and maybe they’ll lose another 50?

Ryan gave a too-jovial “Good morning, everybody!” as he approached the cameras in the House TV studio to explain his rationale. He said he wanted to be more than a “weekend dad.” He said he was leaving on his “own terms,” like Tip O’Neill. (O’Neill was speaker for a decade and left with his party’s majority assured.) He said he achieved a “heck of a lot” with the tax cut and military spending hike. (But that sacrificed the fiscal responsibility Ryan preached for years.) He said he had “no regrets whatsoever” about taking the job — nor apparently about his decision to bind his and his party’s fate to Trump.

The Washington Post’s Paul Kane asked about Trump’s talk of firing special counsel Robert Mueller III and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

“I have no reason to believe that’s going to happen,” Ryan said, citing “assurances” from “people in the White House.”

These same people brought his speakership to ruin. Yet Ryan still trusts.

Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Thursday, Oct. 3

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Vote 2024 logo with red and blue text for US presidential election. Election sticker, badge, label, poster, banner, greeting card. Stars and USA flag red strips Vector illustration.
Editorial: Heck a champion for better discourse, government

The former state legislator and member of Congress works for civil debate and good governance.

Superior Court judge: Rivera has support of local jurists

We are retired judges and are writing to express our support for… Continue reading

10th LD, Pos. 1: Shavers proved himself in first term

Clyde Shavers worked very hard at being a state representative for the… Continue reading

Presidential race: Answer is yes, we’re better off now

The Trump folks ask: “Are you better off now than you were… Continue reading

French: With wink to MAGA, Vance plays nice for veep debate

When it counted, however, the mask slipped and Vance couldn’t admit the events of Jan. 6, 2021.

Stephens: Actually, U.S., Israel need to escalate against Iran

Wars, once entered, need to be fought through to an unequivocal victory.

Monroe, Prop. 1: Levy would add parks, police staff

I’m voting yes for Monroe Proposition 1. The parks in Monroe are… Continue reading

toon
Editorial cartoons for Wednesday, Oct. 2

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Vote 2024. US American presidential election 2024. Vote inscription, badge, sticker. Presidential election banner Vote 2024, poster, sign. Political election campaign symbol. Vector Illustration
Editorial: Hobbs’ work has built on state’s election security

A former state senator from Lake Stevens, Hobbs has improved voter access and election security.

City of Everett must act on downtown vandalism

Is anyone else sick and tired of living in a community of… Continue reading

Comment: U.S. needs to rethink its ‘ironclad’ support of Israel

Such unconditional support, regardless of actions, led alliances of nations quickly into World War I.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.