In split, Ryan stumping for House GOP but not for Trump
CHESTER SPRINGS, Pa. — For Paul Ryan, October is now all about protecting the Republican majority of the House — and his own job as speaker.
The Wisconsin Republican can’t ignore Donald Trump, his party’s bull-in-a-china-shop presidential candidate. Nor can he offend Trump’s millions of voters, whom many House GOP candidates need to survive next month’s elections. Yet amid the remarkable spectacle of the party’s White House nominee and its highest elected official practically at war, Ryan says he’s not going to lift a finger for Trump or even be seen with him.
Instead, Ryan will focus “his entire energy making sure that Hillary Clinton does not get a blank check” with a Democratic Congress if she’s elected president. He made that comment during a conference call with House GOP lawmakers Monday, according to someone on the call.
A day before last Friday’s release of a 2005 video showing Trump making vulgar boasts about forcing himself on women, Ryan made two campaign stops in eastern Pennsylvania in which he never spoke the words “Donald Trump.” That dramatized how Ryan is trying to guide House candidates through rocky political waters Trump has roiled with regularity.

