Moments after their hopes of undoing Obamacare unraveled, President Donald Trump and top Republicans said in unison that they're moving on to another ambitious goal — overhauling the U.S. tax code.
"We will probably start going very, very strongly for the big tax cuts and tax reform," Trump said to reporters Friday after the House bill was pulled from a scheduled floor vote. "That will be next."
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., told reporters that Republicans will proceed with tax legislation — and said he met with Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin earlier on Friday to discuss taxes. Ryan sounded a note of caution: The health bill's failure "does make tax reform more difficult," he said, "but it doesn't in any way make it impossible."
Even before the health bill was withdrawn, two of the Trump administration's top economic officials were shifting the conversation toward taxes. Mnuchin and White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney both said Friday that the White House is at work on a plan for both individual and corporate tax changes.
Still, Ryan's frank assessment of his party's missed opportunity on health care Friday might just as well apply to tax legislation. "Doing big things is hard," he said.
That sentiment reflected the mood of some anxious and frustrated Republicans, who were unable to muster enough votes in their first major test of governing in the Trump era. Several lawmakers said a complete overhaul of the tax code — which hasn't been done in more than 30 years — would be tougher in the wake of the American Health Care Act's defeat, as might the rest of their agenda.
"We have to learn how to govern," said Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark.
This month, Trump, a billionaire businessman who touted his expertise on tax-avoidance strategies during his campaign, at times seemed wistful about letting tax issues take a back seat to health policy. On Monday, during a campaign-style rally in Louisville, he told the crowd: "We want a very big tax cut, but cannot do that until we keep our promise to repeal and replace the disaster known as Obamacare."