advertisement

Trump abruptly cancels signing of bipartisan bill on affordable housing

President Donald Trump abruptly canceled an event to sign a bipartisan affordable-housing bill Wednesday, announcing the ceremony was off as he fumed about the Senate not passing his bill to impose new rules on elections.

An hour and a half before he was due to sign the bill at the Capitol at noon, the president caught lawmakers and his staff by surprise, declaring on social media that a news conference and signing ceremony was “hereby cancelled until such a time as we pass the desperately needed SAVE AMERICA ACT, which I consider to be a National Emergency.”

The announcement came as House Speaker Mike Johnson (Louisiana) and other House GOP leaders were touting the housing bill at a news conference, the stage set for the president in the National Statuary Hall - including a table and chair to sign the legislation.

The housing bill was set to be a rare bipartisan policy accomplishment for the president touching on an issue that has dogged him in polling ahead of the midterms: addressing Americans’ affordability concerns.

Senate Republican leaders repeatedly have told Trump that the votes are not there to pass the Save America Act, which would require proof of citizenship to vote in federal elections, restrict mail voting and impose new restrictions on transgender Americans, among other provisions. The House passed a version of the bill earlier this year that did not include all the provisions Trump has demanded.

Trump was due to meet privately with Republican senators in a lunch after the signing ceremony.

In response to questions about whether Trump would sign the housing bill privately, the White House responded with Trump’s Truth Social post. Trump could allow the bill to become law without his signature.

Shortly before pulling out of the signing event, Trump posted online that the bill “is of minor importance,” calling it “The Elizabeth ‘Pocahontas’ Warren centric housing bill.” Warren, a Democratic senator from Massachusetts, was one of the main authors of the bill in the Senate.

Trump’s sudden announcement came as a surprise to his closest advisers, who had spent the morning touting the legislation as a fulfillment of Trump’s promises to bring down prices for average Americans.

On Wednesday morning, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called it “one of the most significant pieces of housing affordability legislation in American history,” and James Blair, the recently departed White House deputy chief of staff now running Trump’s midterm operation, dubbed it “a signature commitment that President Trump laid out in the State of the Union.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota), who is typically talkative, declined to comment on Trump’s decision shortly after it was made public.

“I guess I would say at this point I don’t have any observations about it,” Thune told reporters.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) urged Trump to sign the bill “and stop making such a fool of himself.”

“It’s utterly amazing,” Schumer said on the Senate floor. “Trump is running away from one of the very few accomplishments that could actually help the American people.”

Johnson tried to shrug away the last-minute change, telling reporters that he spoke to Trump for 20 minutes earlier in the day and that the two agreed Congress has to pass the Save America Act.

He said he knew Trump would cancel the signing, but waited for the president to announce it.

“We’re delaying this,” Johnson said. “He has a window of time before he has to sign a bill.”

Johnson said Republicans would use that time to work on advancing the voting bill. He then went on to praise the housing bill as he stood next to Rep. French Hill (R-Arkansas), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, who shepherded the housing bill through the chamber.

Hill said he was “disappointed” Trump canceled Wednesday’s signing event but said he believed the president would still sign the legislation.

“It’s up to the president of the United States, where and when he signs a bill within his constitutional right,” Hill said. “So he chose, he picked the day, and now he’s chosen to change the day. So we’ll let him do that.”

Elsewhere in the Capitol, Warren suggested that Trump’s cancellation “shouldn’t surprise us,” citing his past comments about affordability concerns being a “hoax” created by Democrats.

“The House and the Senate have worked together to develop a bill on a bipartisan basis that would help bring down housing costs, and Donald Trump has turned his back,” Warren said.