From the New York Times
WASHINGTON
— President Trump used his first official meeting with congressional
leaders on Monday to falsely claim that millions of unauthorized
immigrants had robbed him of a popular vote majority, a return to his
obsession with the election’s results even as he seeks support for his
legislative agenda.
The
claim, which he has made before on Twitter, has been judged untrue by
numerous fact-checkers. The new president’s willingness to bring it up
at a White House reception in the State Dining Room is an indication
that he continues to dwell on the implications of his popular vote loss
even after assuming power.
Mr.
Trump appears to remain concerned that the public will view his victory
— and his entire presidency — as illegitimate if he does not repeatedly
challenge the idea that Americans were deeply divided about sending him
to the White House to succeed President Barack Obama.
Mr. Trump received 304 electoral votes
to capture the White House, but he fell almost three million votes
short of Hillary Clinton in the popular vote. That reality appears to
have bothered him since Election Day, prompting him to repeatedly
complain that adversaries were trying to undermine him.
Moving
into the White House appears not to have tempered that anxiety. Several
people familiar with the closed-door meeting Monday night, who asked to
remain anonymous in discussing a private conversation, said Mr. Trump
used the opportunity to brag about his victory.
As
part of that conversation, Mr. Trump asserted that between three
million and five million unauthorized immigrants voted for Mrs. Clinton.
That is similar to a Twitter message he posted in late November that said he would have won the popular vote “if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally.”
Voting
officials across the country have said there is virtually no evidence
of people voting illegally, and certainly not millions of them. White
House officials did not respond to requests for a comment on Mr. Trump’s
discussion of the issue.
Representative Steny H. Hoyer, Democrat of Maryland, who attended the meeting, said that Mr. Trump also talked about the size of the crowd for his Inaugural Address.
“It
was a huge crowd, a magnificent crowd. I haven’t seen such a crowd as
big as this,” Mr. Hoyer told CNN, quoting Mr. Trump. He added that Mr.
Trump did not “spend a lot of time on that, but it was clear that it was
still on his mind.”
The
president’s comments about the election results and his inauguration
came as he gathered the bipartisan leadership of Congress for a White
House reception. He also sought to build support for an ambitious
legislative agenda, despite days earlier castigating the very
institution he needs to approve it.
Mr. Trump has said he intends to press Congress to move quickly to repeal and replace Mr. Obama’s health care law,
pass a large investment in the nation’s infrastructure, make changes to
the country’s immigration laws and overhaul the tax system.
Senator
John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, called the meeting a “good sort of
get-to-know-you session” and noted that “relationships count for a lot
in this business.”
Mr.
Cornyn said he thought such sessions would be more frequent while Mr.
Trump is in office than they were during Mr. Obama’s tenure. Mr. Obama
famously disliked socializing with members of Congress.
Referring to Democrats, Mr. Cornyn said, “They said they’d never been over to the White House for anything like this before.”
Representative
Nancy Pelosi of California, the Democratic leader, said it was an
“interesting” meeting. Along with health care and infrastructure, she
said they discussed China and currency manipulation, as well as issues
involving intellectual property rights, which she said were a point of
agreement.
“We
talked about the Affordable Care Act and said what the Affordable Care
Act has been successful in doing is improving quality, expanding access
and lowering costs,” she told reporters. “And any proposal that they
might have that does that, we’d be interested in hearing about.”
Even
with Republicans in control of Congress, Mr. Trump will have to build
relationships in a city that he spent more time mocking than praising
during his campaign.
In his Inaugural Address,
the president criticized the political establishment, saying the people
assembled behind him — including the leaders he met with on Monday —
had “reaped the rewards of government while the people have borne the
cost.”
White House officials said the meeting was designed to press the lawmakers on the need to move quickly.
The
reception included, among others, House Speaker Paul D. Ryan of
Wisconsin and Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader,
as well as Ms. Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York.
“The
American people are frustrated with the lack of progress here in
Washington, and the president wants no delay in addressing our most
pressing issues,” said Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary.
“He’s taking every opportunity to forge strong bonds with congressional
leaders on both sides of the aisle.”
As the group sat around a dining room table for photographs, Mr. Trump described his interactions with lawmakers.
A “beautiful, beautiful relationship,” Mr. Trump told reporters.
That
has not always been the case. Before Mr. Trump secured the Republican
nomination, Mr. Ryan pointedly declined to endorse him. At one point, Mr. Ryan said he was “not ready” to back Mr. Trump after his remarks about women and Hispanics and because of his divergence from Republican orthodoxy.
That
relationship slowly improved after Mr. Trump became the party’s nominee
and later won the election to become the 45th president. Monday’s
reception, officials said, was another step in that process.
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